His are green so he was sent the Venture risers so even if he flipped them they'd be off (but waaaay better); I agree his videos are tough to watch - like the pros that speak of their indy titanium baseplates =D
I thought he went out and bought those, which he did - just rechecked his previous video.
He can always go and buy the aftermarket white bushings for those trucks too - pretty easy.
The first rule I would apply is if you are about to do a video to put up on youtube, you should at least do some research and look into what the company is about, their latest products, their catalogs, etc.
* Sorry, mini rant over.
The most frustrating shit is hearing an actual pro skater talk about their gear and get it wrong. I guess that shit probably matters less to a lot of them since they just skate it and don’t go through board madness trying to figure out how to optimize their wheel shape in order to scoop tre flips
Ha yeah, as you said, I guess their ability to skate whatever they end up being sent is the plus for them, more so than their product knowledge, or lack of it, when it comes to some people - even some others I know who just skate and don't even think about what they are riding, who seem to be able to rip on anything and everything that they try.
I recall an Evan Smith video riding one 149 and one 159 truck, or John Gardner talking about switching out his ti axle trucks and putting hollow on cause they were lighter... I guess that is also on the people making the video too - pull them up and don't post things that just make the guy or the brand look stupid.
Anyway, back to Spitfire wheels.