Todd and Joey watch the 1999 rollerblading video by Dave Temple “Espionage.”#Support us on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/mushroombladingBig shout out to the Blading Wiki Archive https://archive.blading.wiki/blading.wiki.png
Todd and Joey watch the 1997 video TBTV2 by Rawlinson Rivera and T-Bone Films.#Support us on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/mushroombladingBig shout out to the Blading Wiki Archive https://archive.blading.wiki/blading.wiki.png
The 58/87 Jumpers are meant for one of the most fun things you can do on rollerblades: jumping around and enjoying movement in the air (and on the ground too). The antithesis to harder, smaller wheels that sometimes can rattle your bones and make your aging knees hurt. Jumpers come in an extremely pleasant 87a hardness meant for comfortable, fast, and fun park riding on flat setups. The rounded but stable profile will have you stomping airs like you’re an ASA pro from the 90s, and your friends will be jealous of your steez. WARNING: You might enjoy softer, smaller wheels so much that you might not go back to harder wheels. * Not recommended for anti-rocker, but you will be COMFORTABLE if you try.
The 100/87 Mugs are meant to be fast, capable and stable while still dropping some hot moves. Originally thought to be a size for speed or distance skaters. The creation of the NR100 Wizard Frame by Leon Basin in late 2014 (once again) changed what big wheel skating could be. Used heavily in the Wizard Frame Testing series, ZONE, MB7 and MB8. These wheels are a powerful tool in a comfortable 87a hardness for city exploring, flat ground skating, park skating and lengthy slides. This size was the first MB pro product and the first pro 100mm wheel in rollerblading history. 100mm wheels are absolutely not core and not certified by the Real Skaters Association of the World. We wont be mad if you skate these on tri skates, but just dont start yelling, death to the 4th wheel.