![]() ![]() another important thing, make sure you can bend ankle for agility. if u can, wait out for some sales, try to get skates that are as light as you can. lightweight is most important imo for aggressive, almost every trick requires some jumping. how often can you jump before you start to feel tired, these are things you need to know. so that means, you have to put extra attention to the weight of the skate you are buying. even if you have been a long time skater, aggressive is very different. these are super guides for aggressive learning. make sure you have proper safety gears, theyre very important. its about conquering your fears and lots of practise. While Valo puts two sizes in a 6-7 mold.Īre you really thinking of moving into aggressive skating? it's completely different. For instance a 6 and 6.5 share the same mold. The benefit is that Rollerblade has full size shell sizing. I only know that the backslide is not replaceable but the souls are. They are fast, they lock and they last forever. I've only used the Blank frames and they are great. People tell me these are underrated skates. Rollerblade New Jack - The 2018 version just came out. These might fit you well, the boot molds are 6-7 and they run narrow. Souls are on the smaller side, harder to do negative grinds because negative is smallest on the market. V13 - Are the same boots as the skinned version Valos. ![]() Souls feel clunky, there's a lot of space between the boot and soul since they had to accommodate the skin. You can put a pair of skates on in seconds and take them off. Perfect liners for the skates and best buckle system. Valo TV (skinned versions) - Well built, solid skates. The mod team may also alter subreddit rules at any time deemed necessary. We enforce the spirit of the rules, not the letter. Violations of any of our rules will be handled at moderator discretion. To view our complete and up to date rules please access the site via the desktop redesign or on the official mobile app. Question & advice threads are not your virtual sales floor. Shop owners, their employees, brands, or distributors are not allowed to sell directly to our users. Please keep in mind that not everyone knows as much as you do so there are no dumb questions. We have a lot of people coming to this subreddit looking for advice. Excessive soapboxing or dog-piling on an OP for not skating the way you approve of is not allowed. No soapboxing, lecturing, or dog-piling others. ![]() ![]() For more information on reddit's site wide rules see reddiquette. If you can’t discuss inline skating without insulting or demeaning others your post will be removed and you may be temporarily or permanently banned at moderator discretion. Personal attacks, hate speech, harassment (including sexually explicit comments about other users), and trolling of anyone in this community will not be tolerated. Transactions are not allowed in this subreddit. This includes motorized skates and tangentially related things like heelys, grind shoes, etc. META commentary and complaints are not allowed as text posts or comments except in official META discussion posts made by the mods of r/rollerblading. (This does not apply on Mondays)Īny images/videos containing injuries or depicting someone being injured while skating must be tagged NSFW. No memes or meta/circlejerk content as submissions. Please do your best to link to the original creator/source of content. Avoid clickbait titles like “Best Sk8 Vid EvErRr?!?!” Tell us what we’re about to watch, read, or listen to. ![]()
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