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N00b Questions


El Cristoff

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A hook is usually used to get up an obstacle too large for any other kind of hop. You jump up the wall as if you're going to hit it vertically, going high enough for your front wheel to 'hook' over the top of the wall. Your bike will then be effectively hanging vertically on the wall with the front wheel over the top. As your front wheel hooks over the wall, your back wheel'll hit the wall; you have push it away instantly using spring from your legs, and by pulling on the bars to lunge your weight up and over the front wheel. You've then basically got to lunge forward enough to roll the bike onto the wall. These two movements are pretty much simultaneous, the aim being to use the bike as a lever against the wall to generate the force to get up it. Check out Neil Tunnicliffe and Damon Watson's vids for hook examples and (hopefully) you should get what I'm on about!

A tap is for fairly big obstacles ( but smaller than hooks) that can't just be pedal hopped (say maybe anything over bar height depending on what your pedal hop limit is). You approach the wall at a fairly quick speed, bring the front wheel up, and as you do, bump it against the edge of the wall, lunging the bike upwards simultaneously, using the rebound from the impact to throw you up. As the obstcales get bigger, you might eventually have to hit the wheel below the edge, on the vertical surface of the wall, but the technique is pretty much the same. Taps'll be in pretty much most trials vids, but I think a lot of Stan Shaws vids (on the Tartybikes website) have them in.

Strath.

Edited by Rumplestiltskin
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