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joecarve

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Posts posted by joecarve

  1. More travel fun: Earlier this year, the ever-vigilant TSA forced me to check a carry-on bag because it contained a 5mm T-handle wrench. Fair warning for those of you carrying gear.

    Soon we'll all be boarding empty-handed wearing a hospital gown and plastic flip-flops...

    joe...

  2. Originally posted by Allee

    Apart from that, just be your fabulous self, don't take any ****, and recognise that he might not be perfect, but he can be trained!

    You probably want to start with one of us that's already housebroken, then work from there... :D

  3. Originally posted by C5 Golfer

    Vewry seldom if ever do you or will you see an engineer on a jury. True fact.

    Well, there weren't any mirrors in the courtroom, so technically, I can't disagree with you.

    Originally posted by lonerider

    Now we have like engineering reality shows like Junkyard Wars, Robot Wars, American Chopper, and BIG! were real engineers build stuff. That seems to count to me.

    If only these shows would scrap the "drama" side of it and have non-stop gearhead-related content. The absolute worse offender is OverHauling...really outstanding work going on in those projects, but you see so little of it due to the "pranks".

  4. Originally posted by SWriverstone

    LOL---funny replies all. Yeah, I've got plenty to keep me busy. Holly and I are headed to the Outer Banks for a week tomorrow---we look like the Beverly Hillbillies we're taking so many toys---kayaks, bikes, skateboards, inline skates, hang gliders [for dune soaring], remote-controlled gliders, musical instruments... We have the full-on "Air, Land, and Sea" vehicle! :D

    You're going to the outer banks in april without windsurfing gear? You need a bigger vehicle. :D

    I took a hangliding lesson at Jockey's Ridge forever ago...flared out way early, got the trainer kite surprisingly high (maybe 10 feet) and into a hard left hander. Out of the corner of my eye I could see another lesson group scattering as I headed toward them...white-knuckled death grip on the bar, hangin' on for dear life. Then the left leading edge dug into the sand and the kite carwheeled. My friends said it looked pretty impressive...

    joe...

  5. The Randall bushings are kinda suckful - I set mine up the same as Doug. I actually use a fender washer between the Stimulator bushings and the truck base (where he has no washer)...it's a tad less turnier that way, but I figure it loads the bushing a little more evenly. Either way, it's a big improvement over the stock Randall bushings.

    joe...

  6. Nothing terribly recent or obscure, but they are food related, and most of us eat...

    <B>Kitchen Confidential, by Anthony Bourdain</B> Very funny account of one man's career in the restaurant business, climbing the ladder to executive chef. Find out why the two worst words to combine at a restaurant are "sunday" and "brunch".

    <B>Fast Food Nation, by Eric Schlosser</B> Follows development of fast food industry (oddly enough). I won't be able to do it justice here - plenty of other reviews floating about. The easily-queased might want to skip the chapter on beef "production".

  7. My wife rides in Raichle 324's (now the Suzuka? ask Fin or Michelle), which are 4-buckle, with the moldable TF liners...it was the more comfy boot of the old Raichle line. She's riding with both boots unlocked at the moment; 60-degrees front and rear on a 19.5cm wide board puts her toes and heels at the edges of the deck.

    Her progression of boards:

    - Nidecker Rave 150 - soft, easy to turn...6 days.

    - Burton UltraPrime 164 - all-mountain style of deck, though significantly softer than an Donek Axis or Coiler AM. Probably 10 days on that before getting...

    - Donek FreeCarve 163

    She still rides the UP in softer conditions, but she's wanting something a bit more aggressive as an all-mountain deck.

  8. Footbraking is actually pretty effective...I think there are guys doing it at surprisingly high speed. I'm not a fast skater, but I basically don't ride any faster than I can comfortably footbrake...like a lot of other things, start slow and work your way up. Good tips on ncdsa, obviously.

    Coleman-style sliding is something I'm thinking of playing around with, though in every video I've seen of it, it seems to be the opposite of good carving skills - looking downhill across the board, breaking at the waist, etc. But it is cool. :D

    joe...

  9. The spring tension can be tightened by the allen-head screws...see seismic site. If that's not enough, you can buy stiffer springs.

    If you skate with any regularity in the offseason, you'll be better on snow the beginning of the next season than you were at the end of the last. Same deal every year. I found skating particularly useful in teaching myself cross-under turns.

    Before you get out of control, learn to footbrake. Also, wearing a helmet is a pretty good idea with any sort of speed other than just cruising around.

    joe...

  10. I've got a Dragonfly from last year - very nicely made deck. However, it's a bit too stiff for my weight and/or riding style (I'm 165lb, making easy big turns on asphalt). I can't quite fully decamber it just standing on it - it definitely wants to be ridden aggressively. To order it again, I'd opt for the lighter flex. I'm selling mine if anyone's interested (green model)...I've got maybe 5 or 6 hours on it, so it's basically new.

    joe...

  11. Originally posted by Jon Dahl

    applied to the back of my board would deter those pesky jibbers/skiers in the lift lines, and the free base grind would stop them from catching me afterwards!

    For that, I think you want a Dakine Spike stomp pad, which conveniently separates into strips that can be stuck to the back of five decks (outside ones are thicker and angled a bit)

    post-111-141842203546_thumb.jpg

  12. Originally posted by Randy S.

    For clarification, we're talking about either an fanstastic untracked powder day or a day on perfect cord (your preference) vs. sex with your dream date (male/female, whatever). Forced to choose, which would you choose?

    I generally prefer single-gender dates, so I'm gonna go with a day of untracked cord...

    joe...

  13. Saw this piece of a cardboard box in my neighborhood - it's from a Samsung 50" DLP TV. Though cropped down...it's a box for a carver!

    Note international symbols for care and feeding of contents (L to R) :

    - Don't stack carvers more than 3 high (isn't two already a problem?)

    - Keep the body upright

    - Don't let it get rained on

    - Don't make it carry heavy objects while riding

    - Keep minimum distance between riders

    - Provide with alcohol (hmm, seems a little dicey)

    - Enforce narrow trenches.

    joe...

    post-111-141842203455_thumb.jpg

  14. Originally posted by SWriverstone

    Like I said, I'm just focusing hard on warm-weather sports! Right now we're surfing around looking at inline skates---

    Inline skates? You want a longboard skateboard. Go waste some time over on ncdsa and you'll find what you'll be doing in warm weather (a bit of an overload of forums, but poke around a bit)...

    joe...

  15. I rode an FP167 for a season before switching to a Donek FreeCarve 171. The FreeCarve is definitely stiffer than the FP, but has way, way more edgehold. I felt the increased stiffness was offset by the tighter turning radius. Haven't ridden the FP since...

    joe...

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