AlaskaDogfart
Member
What kind of jumps out of the park are the best for learning 360s?
14113609:PubicLouse said:Very end of halfpipe where the wall gets super low and not vert. Use it as a kicker, landing on the deck of the halfpipe (if we can call it that down at the end). You only have to spin closer to 270 too.
**This post was edited on Mar 2nd 2020 at 7:26:33am
topic:akshredder7 said:jumps out of the park
14113398:Young_IMPC said:For the first 10 times, like a 5 footer for confidence. It’s easiest to throw on a 10 foot jump though- enough air time to bring it around but not too much to make it awkward
14113759:SofaKingSick said:360s on tiny jumps are super different than big/normal ones IMO and doing tiny ones can ingrain bad habits. i say find the biggest jump you're 100% comfy on and do it there-- don't have to huck or fall backseat, it'll just come around
my 2 cents!
14113774:Young_IMPC said:5 foot clearance gives you a couple seconds to throw. That’s plenty of time to do a proper 360 unless you’ve never tried one on flat ground without skis.
14113774:Young_IMPC said:5 foot clearance gives you a couple seconds to throw. That’s plenty of time to do a proper 360 unless you’ve never tried one on flat ground without skis.
14113791:ConesForBreakfast said:A couple seconds?? How much speed are you hitting this thing with?
14113796:Young_IMPC said:This is about a 5 foot jump (lip to knuckle). It may be a little less than 2 seconds in the air, but there is undeniably space for a legitimate 360
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14113797:ConesForBreakfast said:That looks bigger than 5 feet for sure. 5 feet is shorter than most skis...
14113806:Young_IMPC said:It’s the camera angle. Here’s another shot of brighton’s majestic jumps
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