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Skateboarding => Shoes & Gear => Topic started by: modern life is war on December 29, 2022, 04:53:41 PM
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How long do your decks/trucks/wheels/shoes usually last, and what type of skating do you usually do?
For me:
Deck - 6 months
Trucks - 1 year
Wheels - 9 months
Shoes - 5 months
and I skate 100% transition
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How long do your decks/trucks/wheels/shoes usually last, and what type of skating do you usually do?
For me:
Deck - 6 months
Trucks - 1 year
Wheels - 9 months
Shoes - 5 months
and I skate 100% transition
I was dumfounded by yours until I saw you skated only transition. Makes sense.
Deck- 1 month if I'm lucky. I need to stop doing fs flips cause I land too nose heavy and always crack it. Can't resist tho.
Trucks- 1.5 years in the past but I accumulated so many trucks out of madness that it's hard to tell as I switch when I need a new feeling
Shoes-2 months
Wheels-6 months
Bearings- 3-6 months depending on luck.
I skate mostly street with some skatepark and transition.
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Forever. Because I don't skate, I just post on slap. ;D
Honestly though probably a year for a set up, meaning deck, wheels bearings. Trucks are way longer, I've had the same pairs of Indy's for years and a new pair of ventures on a different/bigger set up. I think upkeep on trucks is important, like changing out the bushings and pivot cups help tremendously, every once in awhile. Shoes are changing all the time, I can't help myself.
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- Deck and shoes: 1 - 2 months
- Trucks: 1 year? That was what my Films lasted me but they wore down pretty fast, now I'm skating AF1 ans sure they will last longer.
- Bearings: 5 years
- Wheels: 1 year
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Since I skate daily:
Decks 1 month - 6 weeks
Trucks 7 months till I hit axle, would continue to use but the Lurpivs broke and the Indys got a defective axle thread from too much rethreading
Wheels until they are 45mm
Bearings until they jam and I can’t get them going
Shoes same as decks
Bolts until the Allen key turns round without purchase
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Boards vary, sometimes a month sometimes six. Depends how attached I get.
Trucks stay until they break, kingpin, axle, baseplate whatever goes first.
Wheels until they get too boxy, usually a year or so.
Bearing again until they break, I had Swiss in until I found them in pieces. Then onto the next set.
I’ve had the same bolts for 10+ years, just replace the nuts once the nylock is truly gone
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Deck - 2-3 months
Shoes - 3 months
Wheels - 6 months or to 45mm
Trucks - 1-2 years with maintenance
Bearings - couple years if I keep them clean
That's 100% flatground, skating around 30-40 hours a month.
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It varies from year to year based on life shit but:
Deck: 1 - 4 months
Shoes: 3 months (can stretch these longer when I rotate shoes or do fewer flip tricks on sessions for awhile)
Trucks: 2 years (Indys never quit on me)
Wheels: 6 months - 1 year
Bearings: usually same as length as wheels or half the time of my wheels
Hardware: until I lose bolts or they get stripped usually
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About tree fiddy
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decks 3-4 months
trucks 2 years
wheels 1 year
bearings 2 years
shoes 3-4 months with a lot of shoe goo
low impact street skating for about 10-30 hours per month
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deck: about a month when i get to skate often, during the winter i usually skate the same deck for about 3 months because i skate once a week or so
trucks: when i was on aces i had a set last me 3 years but there's pretty much no concrete ledges around me nor are there grindable curbs, i'm on ventures now and i hope to keep skating them til 2023 ends. thunders lasted me a year every time i had them. i hate new trucks.
wheels: i skate them until they're very tiny so 10 months to a year usually
shoes: if they last a month i'm happy
bearings: i always bought the cheap stuff so 6 months usually, i have the skfs now and i hope that they will last longer
50% of my skating is bs flips on hips, 45% is other street stuff, 5% is tranny
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Deck: 2-3 months
Trucks: 3-4 months
Wheels: 6 months
Bearings: 1 year or less based on the weather
Shoes: 2-3 months
90% slappies 10% flatground 2 hours daily
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Deck: 2-4 months (Winter)
Trucks: Forever
Wheels: 1 year for sure, I start as big as possible and make em tiny
Bearings: 1-2 Years I think, Mini logos going strong
Shoes: 2-3 months till they fall apart
Skating everything, still haven't axled a single truck in my life. It might happen 2023 though
Trucks - 1-2 years with maintenance
100% flatground
What's happening to your trucks?
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pre-injury
deck: 1-2months
trucks: 1 year
wheels: 1-2 years (ride till they're in 40's)
bearings: 6months - 1year
shoes: 2months? I have a trunk full of shoes and constantly rotate almost every session but if I stuck to one would probably be around that length, maybe more since I'm a master with shoe goo/super glue
been out with a ankle injury since late summer and just started getting my pop back so my gear is finally seeing some action again :)
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I've been on the same deck since I got Covid in late September. It turned out to be a solid way to make my gear last longer.
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Deck: 2-4 months (Winter)
Trucks: Forever
Wheels: 1 year for sure, I start as big as possible and make em tiny
Bearings: 1-2 Years I think, Mini logos going strong
Shoes: 2-3 months till they fall apart
Skating everything, still haven't axled a single truck in my life. It might happen 2023 though
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Trucks - 1-2 years with maintenance
100% flatground
What's happening to your trucks?
Bent axles on 2 pairs of tensor mag lights so those barely lasted 4-6 months a set each... graduated to Thunder Lights which served me well for 18 months until i snapped a kingpin on a switch FS pop shuv.
Try as I might, i couldn't get the snapped kingpin out of the baseplate so I gave them away and bought another pair.
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If I stretch I get
10 boards a year
.5 trucks a year
One set of wheels pr 18 months if over 53mm at the start 6 - 8 months under 53 (hard wheels)
One set of ceramic bearings every decade give or take.
I buy one set of regular bearings a year that I use when I'm too lazy to clean the ceramic ones. Got a set of Swiss right begining of Covid. They might go the distance? I take good care of those.
3 sets of Allen hardware since 2016
Dlx 3 ply risers looking like they might last a few years if I keep changing my trucks at axles.
I never tail slide anymore so I can just switch the baseplates to protect the risers I guess if they start to delam
Shoes are problematic since Covid started. If I get a good pair I can get 6 months of of them with glue.
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Deck: 4-6 weeks
Shoes: 6-8 weeks
Trucks: 1 year
Wheels: 6-9 month
Bearings: 1,5 years so far. (swiss 6, with one of the bearing damaged due to being dumb)
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Deck: 1-2 months
Shoes : 2 months
Wheels 3-4 months
Trucks: Year+
Bearings 6 months-Year
Hardware: like every 2-3 deck change
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decks: 3 months. sometimes they could go longer but a fresh deck feels too good not to.
shoes: 6 months. i hate new shoes. takes me like a month before i even feel good in em.
wheels: i only switched when i wanted to try new shapes. been rotating between 2 sets the last 18 months. havnt gotten to a point where i feel like i actually need new ones in recent years.
trucks: 2 years? but i like them fucked up.
bearings i only switch the ones who break. never put a full new set in when the rest still working.
i like a fresh deck. hate replacing the rest.
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
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I don’t ever use my stuff all the way. I stay blessing those around me and indulge myself in my consumerism and support my local shop. Boards third ply and bye bye. Trucks two sets a year, unless I have madness. Wheels twice a year. shoes and clothes tho last me the least…can’t repeat outfits in clips or just showing up at the spot randomly 😆 🤷🏽♂️
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
Quite a few guys I skate with can destroy / break a board pretty much on flat from sheer stompage and skating hard - often the board is not in two pieces, but it sure is dead, often within a week or so if they are really skating hard, tail through five or more layers and the whole thing so well used, but more likely a month on average for most of them.
My boards and pretty much everything else for me last a long, long time, but I have learned which tricks NOT to do as they will break a board more often than not and I am not one to go too hard nowdays, compared to when I used to skate a whole lot more back when I was more able to go out most days for most of the day.
I do skate more transition than anything else now too, but still enjoy more simple street skating and hitting fun spots / places, etc.
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
Quite a few guys I skate with can destroy / break a board pretty much on flat from sheer stompage and skating hard - often the board is not in two pieces, but it sure is dead, often within a week or so if they are really skating hard, tail through five or more layers and the whole thing so well used, but more likely a month on average for most of them.
My boards and pretty much everything else for me last a long, long time, but I have learned which tricks NOT to do as they will break a board more often than not and I am not one to go too hard nowdays, compared to when I used to skate a whole lot more back when I was more able to go out most days for most of the day.
I do skate more transition than anything else now too, but still enjoy more simple street skating and hitting fun spots / places, etc.
Curious at what tricks you have learned not to do? Personally hardflips have been responsible for several snapped boards now.
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
Quite a few guys I skate with can destroy / break a board pretty much on flat from sheer stompage and skating hard - often the board is not in two pieces, but it sure is dead, often within a week or so if they are really skating hard, tail through five or more layers and the whole thing so well used, but more likely a month on average for most of them.
My boards and pretty much everything else for me last a long, long time, but I have learned which tricks NOT to do as they will break a board more often than not and I am not one to go too hard nowdays, compared to when I used to skate a whole lot more back when I was more able to go out most days for most of the day.
I do skate more transition than anything else now too, but still enjoy more simple street skating and hitting fun spots / places, etc.
Curious at what tricks you have learned not to do? Personally hardflips have been responsible for several snapped boards now.
Hardflips are usually a board breaker for others I skate with too.
I don't really flip my board much at all any more, besides just the show and tell flips to help people at the indoor park, but the big as you can do them frontside disasters / deckers on ramps would be a good one I left behind and only did really small mellow ones when I did do them. If you ever watch people like Wade Speyer doing massive front deckers that smacked so loud, that is how I wanted to do them.
I would also break a nose or a tail off from tre flips a little to easily back in the day, which is why I stopped and then never did them for a long time, whereas kicky front boardslides on flatbars were the most common other board breaker I would see from others.
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deck- realistically 6 months but since im an adult with expendable income ill skate it till im bored or drive past the skate shop and buy a new one then pass it on to a kid
trucks- till they snap
wheels- till they are 50mm
shoes- usually till they have holes
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deck- 2-2.5 months
trucks- a long ass time lol. usually until I decide I’m gonna be neurotic about shit. realistically, about 2-3 years
wheels- usually I’ll skate a set of wheels for every two decks. so 4-6 months
bearings- rarely, if ever. I have bearings in one of my setups that have been going about 3 years. I’ll replace them individually when they shit out, which is almost never.
shoes - generally the same as wheels, every two decks. sometimes more, sometimes less. depending on the shoe. the vans Wayvee’s I’m about to skate will probably last longer than the authentic’s I’m skating rn (for example)
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Deck lasts a month or 2. I hardly ever focus so it's usually when the tail razors too much.
Trucks till they're busted. I skated one set of thunders for 3 years once.
Shoes at least a month and a half, usually more till the sole wears through.
58-60mm tires last a Goodyear.
I buy 2 sets of reds a year.
Skating all kinds of shit, mostly street in the summer.
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
See "Sale Gear Thread" for tips on how to maintain a supposed expensive hobby at an affordable rate hahah!
To be honest, scoring some gear at record low $ was a foresight investment: stack of boards and a stack of shoes to skate through bought at 50-70% of made it less expensive. Also easier to swap earlier than probably necessary. I do my best to ride all parts to dust though
Personally, I have a large bag of flip tricks and i tend to do a handful of them every skate session I have (warm up and cool down). Each session I push myself to land all of these to feel satisfied:
-kickflip
-fakie flip
-varial flip
-tre flip
-backside bigspin
-backside flip
-fakie tre flip
-half cab flip
-switch heel
-caballerial
If I'm feeling a flat ground week or a tech ledge week trying flip in or flip outs, then the boards and shoes can get toast pretty fast, even now at 28 and skating less often then 10 years ago.
I'm sure there are others that have to do certain tricks each session to keep them or feel happy and all that wear adds up quickly.
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really into new gear so:
Board and shoes 1- 2 months- i usually just get bored of looking down and switch my shoes or they get floppy/ holes in them. board and shoes last me the same mostly....
trucks: 1 year
bearings: till they break, i try to get swisses and the last set is still going strong after 5 years- in my crusier board now though
hardware: i switch it out every couple boards if i want to but could go a year or longer i guess
since i am a big snob when it comes to gear i always hook up a homie in need or some kids with my used stuff that mostly is still fine for others.
old trucks i usually put on my cruiser
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
If I'm gonna waste my time skateboarding, I want to waste it skating at my highest potential. New boards and shoes especially really do make it easier to do tricks for me. I try to reach a balance point between the two tho and stretch a board as long as it still feels good. Skating is still relatively cheap when compared to golf or snowboarding or something like that. I guess cheaper hobbies are also out there but thats how i justify it in my mind.
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i wonder how long gear "last" average relates to where people are located too.
buying new gear in the US is like almost half the price of gear in Europe. while Japan and Australia will pay like 3 times as much for gear.
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i wonder how long gear "last" average relates to where people are located too.
buying new gear in the US is like almost half the price of gear in Europe. while Japan and Australia will pay like 3 times as much for gear.
Location matters based on location due to the environment you skate, too. Midwest crust eats shit up pretty quick. Those overseas prices are murder.
I almost never buy anything full price and have a skate credit card that I put shoes and decks on. I make biweekly payments of like 15 bucks and it's paid off by the time I buy something new. That way I'm staying fresh for what feels like less.
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Boards - about a month, longer during winter
Shoes - about two months
Trucks - until I can’t get the axle nut on anymore
Wheels - a couple of months
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
See "Sale Gear Thread" for tips on how to maintain a supposed expensive hobby at an affordable rate hahah!
To be honest, scoring some gear at record low $ was a foresight investment: stack of boards and a stack of shoes to skate through bought at 50-70% of made it less expensive. Also easier to swap earlier than probably necessary. I do my best to ride all parts to dust though
Personally, I have a large bag of flip tricks and i tend to do a handful of them every skate session I have (warm up and cool down). Each session I push myself to land all of these to feel satisfied:
-kickflip
-fakie flip
-varial flip
-tre flip
-backside bigspin
-backside flip
-fakie tre flip
-half cab flip
-switch heel
-caballerial
If I'm feeling a flat ground week or a tech ledge week trying flip in or flip outs, then the boards and shoes can get toast pretty fast, even now at 28 and skating less often then 10 years ago.
I'm sure there are others that have to do certain tricks each session to keep them or feel happy and all that wear adds up quickly.
I am like that too, but my bag is shallow. However, I skate everyday and need to do several kickflips (over manhole, over tiny curb, down large curb, up regular curb), three halfway decent heelflips, and one decent fakie heel (alongside a plethora of less board consuming pop shoves and 180s).
Heelflips are the bane of my existence and take the most time of the session. I often primo and that‘s where my boards get chipped quickly. They become asymetrical and after 4-6 weeks I usually have to get rid of them. I pass some of them on to my nephew and godson so they get another lease of life, but they would not be of much use to anybody who skates seriously. Dudes even ask me why I keep riding them as long as I do because they look so battered.
Also skating in the winter with wet/frozen ground my board tends to feel heavy/waterlogged quickly.
I tend to skate better on a fresh board (not a fresh shape) so I try to pick up multiple identical boards at a time when they are on sale, provided they are suitable to my taste.
As for shoes I found out shoe goo does not extend the life of a shoe drastically so I stopped using it. I just skate them until there are holes, then move on. I skate Busenitzes and they are regularly on sale in some strange colorways so I pick those up.
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
I gotta cut out stuff like new clothes and deodorant lol. I just double down on soap.
The impossible kills all my boards. Gumby tail. When 7.75s was standard I stopped doing the trick so much especially down shit.
That's how you go though 3 boards a week. I had to quit doing real tricks for 12 years over baby boards. That I couldn't afford.
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Setup usually lasts around a year at least. I skate mostly transition and cruise around the streets so my trucks, wheels and grip wear down the most, deck not so much.
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The Sale Gear Thread ruined me. I just set up a new deck today cause I got tired of looking at the Toy Machine graphic on my last one. I skate twice a week but was injured between Nov-Dec. So I got like two months from the deck, could’ve stretched it out to Spring.
I have a few FA decks I want to try that I got for $30 each during that crazy sale. So I may start switching them out every month just cause (and give the old ones away).
Trucks: Forever
Wheels: 6 Months
Bearings: Forever
Shoes: 3 months (I lose traction before I put holes in them).
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I almost never buy anything full price and have a skate credit card that I put shoes and decks on. I make biweekly payments of like 15 bucks and it's paid off by the time I buy something new. That way I'm staying fresh for what feels like less.
That's actually a great idea
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I have thought about this. I will start to recycle gear: once the decks are chipped I will rebuild them with liquid wood, regrip them if necessary (I have many of those free shop grips) and use them as curb and eventually as rain set ups.
I will run an 8.38 on 144s on my street/flip set up, and my used 8.5s on 149s on the curb/rain set ups, as I have two sets of 149s, one is down to the axle (this will go on the rain set up) and one still good as new (for dry slappy sessions). I will run Spit 52s on all set ups, but on the rain set up it will be 25 year old wheels.
So ideally, a deck will have three stages of life: Street decks as long as it is crisp and unchipped, then as curb board and eventually as rain board.
How does that sound?
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I just wish it was easier to pass along shoes. Old hardgoods it’s easy to find a kid with a messed up setup I can pass old gear to but I always feel guilty throwing out a pit of shoes even if they’re destroyed but I don’t want to give a kid a pair of old sweaty shoes at the park. Makes me skate shoes well past their useable stage into almost dangerous territory
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I just wish it was easier to pass along shoes. Old hardgoods it’s easy to find a kid with a messed up setup I can pass old gear to but I always feel guilty throwing out a pit of shoes even if they’re destroyed but I don’t want to give a kid a pair of old sweaty shoes at the park. Makes me skate shoes well past their useable stage into almost dangerous territory
Totally. It’s tough for me too cause I wear a size 13. Can’t even sale em lol
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Damn, skating must become an expensive hobby when you get a new deck and shoes once every 6 weeks. I don't know how you guys are going through decks that fast unless you're all jumping down stairs and gaps like you're 18.
If I'm gonna waste my time skateboarding, I want to waste it skating at my highest potential. New boards and shoes especially really do make it easier to do tricks for me. I try to reach a balance point between the two tho and stretch a board as long as it still feels good. Skating is still relatively cheap when compared to golf or snowboarding or something like that. I guess cheaper hobbies are also out there but thats how i justify it in my mind.
I feel you on that. I also tell myself that I work too hard to skate something I'm not stoked on. Also at 36 years young I'm trying to give myself all the advantages that come with a crispy set up
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I just wish it was easier to pass along shoes. Old hardgoods it’s easy to find a kid with a messed up setup I can pass old gear to but I always feel guilty throwing out a pit of shoes even if they’re destroyed but I don’t want to give a kid a pair of old sweaty shoes at the park. Makes me skate shoes well past their useable stage into almost dangerous territory
Unhoused people will dig em. every pair i put in a transient spot is gone within a few hours.
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I just wish it was easier to pass along shoes. Old hardgoods it’s easy to find a kid with a messed up setup I can pass old gear to but I always feel guilty throwing out a pit of shoes even if they’re destroyed but I don’t want to give a kid a pair of old sweaty shoes at the park. Makes me skate shoes well past their useable stage into almost dangerous territory
Unhoused people will dig em. every pair i put in a transient spot is gone within a few hours.
Yeah, I've noticed that as well with old shoes & shirts (washed before dropping off) that I've left in areas with local transients/homeless. I've definitely seen some of them around the area wearing shoes or a shirt I dropped off shortly after. Stoked they didn't just sell for cash/drugs right away like some might. And if that's what they end up doing, so be it, since it's theirs at that point.
Anyone else currently on a mission to not buy any new skate gear and wear through everything you currently have?
I haven't bought shoes since Dec 17. 2022 and am working to maintain that alongside skating/selling/donating current pairs to reduce my covid deal sale purchases. Gotta get rid of the bloat at some point! With that, I'm noticing again how long I can actually skate on a deck/trucks/shoes/etc before I need to replace. Some of my averages I posted last year have extended recently since I've been skating less due to life and playing soccer more.
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I just wish it was easier to pass along shoes. Old hardgoods it’s easy to find a kid with a messed up setup I can pass old gear to but I always feel guilty throwing out a pit of shoes even if they’re destroyed but I don’t want to give a kid a pair of old sweaty shoes at the park. Makes me skate shoes well past their useable stage into almost dangerous territory
Unhoused people will dig em. every pair i put in a transient spot is gone within a few hours.
Super good point thank you so much for the suggestion :)
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Deck about a month, if I like it alot I’ll strech it to about 6 weeks. I never break em, but I like them pretty crispy.
Shoes maybe 2 months
Wheels go when they’re sub 50mm
Trucks get bent or broken in about 3 years.
New set of Swiss every 2-4 years.
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Anyone else swap trucks from front to back when you hit axle? I was hitting axle toe side back truck, swapped em from front to back. Not worried about axle on heel side front truck at all so its like ive got a new set thats already broken in
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Anyone else swap trucks from front to back when you hit axle? I was hitting axle toe side back truck, swapped em from front to back. Not worried about axle on heel side front truck at all so its like ive got a new set thats already broken in
Yup, always. I usually hit axle first back truck heel side from fs grinds on coping. When I was younger I always tried to swap from front to back everytime I set up new board,to keep that wear even as possible.
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Hey for you blazer wearers out there, im moving thru my first pair. Leather, not suede, mids. Been putting in 2-3 hrs at the skate park 3x a week for the past 4 or 5 weeks. Wearing em as my all the time shoes as well.
They’re holding up pretty nicely, at least compared to half cabs. Foxing is still glued in place. Starting to show wear on pushing sole. But the outer layer of the ollie spot is getting pretty work thru to the fabric inside. Next week will probably be hitting socks.
Is this about standard wear and tear for this shoe? Overall, they are still supportive, collar hasnt torn or mushed out. Soles are good to walk in etc
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I ride most of my gear for about as long as possible
Deck - 2months if I'm skating the smoothest park in town, probably closer to 1mo if I'm doing more street or at the rough park
Trucks - basically until there's no hangar material, 1-2 years
Wheels - once I notice they're getting small, like idk, 50-51mm - starting at 54mm they're usually good half a year if I'm skating the same set-up
Bearings - Run em till they die, then replace with spares, never paid attention to how often
Shoes - 3 months if I'm lucky, start getting soggy around 2 months tho
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i wonder how long gear "last" average relates to where people are located too.
buying new gear in the US is like almost half the price of gear in Europe. while Japan and Australia will pay like 3 times as much for gear.
true true..frm where i'm from, branded import boards are expensive. local brands (chinese pressed boards) are cheaper.blank boards, blank trucks, blank grip and blank bearings are the go to for kids here.