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  2. Longboard (skateboard) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longboard_(skateboard)

    A 44-inch (110 cm) pintail shaped deck. Longboard decks are typically made from plywood: anywhere from two to eleven layers, each of usually 2 millimeters (0.079 in) in thickness, composed of birch, bamboo, maple, koa, or oak wood. Longboards are commercially available in a variety of shapes and sizes.

  3. List of skateboarding brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_skateboarding_brands

    Many skateboard brands sell apparel and accessories as well as decks, trucks, wheels and bearings. Skateboard apparel is recognized as an integral part of the skateboard scene, and has been further developed as streetwear.

  4. Powell Peralta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powell_Peralta

    Powell-Peralta Skateboards appeared in several films: The 1992 film Encino Man features Brendan Fraser's character Link riding a Lance Mountain Family (art by Lance's son) skateboard deck near the end. There is a Powell-Peralta poster clearly visible in Dave's room.

  5. Longboarding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longboarding

    Makana Cummins in California. Longboarding is a variation of skateboarding typified by the use of longer boards ("decks") with longer wheelbases and softer wheels.While longboards vary widely in shape and size, compared to street skateboards longboards are designed to be more stable at speed and to have more traction due to larger wheel sizes and softer wheel durometers.

  6. Kryptonics (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kryptonics_(company)

    Kryptonics Skateboards is an American manufacturer of Skateboards and Longboards founded in 1965 and originally manufactured polyurethane products for the mining and computer industry. In the mid-1970s, the company introduced the Kryptonics Star Trac line of wheels that drastically changed the functionality of skateboards.

  7. Sector 9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sector_9

    Sector 9 The company was started in La Jolla, California in 1993 by cofounders Steve Lake, Dave Klimkiewicz, Dennis Telfer, and Tal O'Farrell. [1] [2] Sector 9 is currently headquartered in San Diego, California.

  8. Snakeboard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snakeboard

    The name "streetboard" comes from the idea that it is a "snowboard for the streets". The original patent for the snakeboard refers to the board as a "Pivoting Skateboard" and in recent years there has been discussions around using more technically descriptive terms such as pivotboard and pivotskate. [7] The term swingboard has also been used. [8]

  9. Frank Nasworthy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Nasworthy

    But Nasworthy’s discovery was the catalyst for the second skateboard boom. As a professional freestyle competitor at the time noted: The progress of the urethane [sic] wheels just totally stoked me; you could do so much more on a skateboard, surf moves, especially; you could carve your turns and stuff without sliding, that changed everything ...

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