Alternative Cyber Slalom
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- Posts: 59
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36 cone cyber
Hi Vlad,
I've been lurking but not skating too much lately. Looks like my old parking garage location for cyberslalom may be off limits for a while (new security guards) so I am looking for other spots.
So lets get this 36 cone thing started so we can add some variety. I guess the questions remaining will be push start distance, location of timer start and stops, and cone spacing (should we go metric on everything?)
If metric then lets choose distances where its easy to convert to ft and inches.
Push start distance - should it be 8 meters? Less? More?
Location of timer start and stop - at first and last cone centers?
Cone spacing - should be go metric at 1.7m and use 5ft 7" (very small error).
Cone penalties - clean runs only?
Also are you going to make it to the cyber cup this year? It really motivated me to skate hard last year when you were pushing me so hard on the cyber - a lot more fun that way.
Hope all is well,
Michael
I've been lurking but not skating too much lately. Looks like my old parking garage location for cyberslalom may be off limits for a while (new security guards) so I am looking for other spots.
So lets get this 36 cone thing started so we can add some variety. I guess the questions remaining will be push start distance, location of timer start and stops, and cone spacing (should we go metric on everything?)
If metric then lets choose distances where its easy to convert to ft and inches.
Push start distance - should it be 8 meters? Less? More?
Location of timer start and stop - at first and last cone centers?
Cone spacing - should be go metric at 1.7m and use 5ft 7" (very small error).
Cone penalties - clean runs only?
Also are you going to make it to the cyber cup this year? It really motivated me to skate hard last year when you were pushing me so hard on the cyber - a lot more fun that way.
Hope all is well,
Michael
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1.7m
Is this the distance for ISSA tight? I gotta go find those rules somewhere.
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- ISSA President 2011-2024
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The ISSA rules are currently on www.pcpal.se/issa .
I'll move them over this site when I can find the time.
/Jani
ed note: Thank you Jani. I have had many people contact me for the ISSA rules, that they are hard to find. Since we have a lot of ISSA in www.slalomskateboarder.com I think it would be appropriate to have an easy to find set of rules here. adam
I'll move them over this site when I can find the time.
/Jani
ed note: Thank you Jani. I have had many people contact me for the ISSA rules, that they are hard to find. Since we have a lot of ISSA in www.slalomskateboarder.com I think it would be appropriate to have an easy to find set of rules here. adam
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- Corky - World Ranking Master Mind
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About cyber start rules. Why do we always have to decide a certain start distance? It will always fit some better than others. I have always wondered if it couldn't work better just saying 4 pushes. That would fit everyone whether you are a fast or slow pusher, you have really strong legs or not, you are a beginner or pro. If everybody got time to do their 4 pushes I think the "start speed window" would be more equal. More like a start ramp. And then it would give more importance to pumping the slalom course well instead of, as now, where it's all about who is the best pusher.
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Hi Corky,
With NCDSA cyberslalom, the timer starts 15ft from the first cone and the timer starts when you cross the line and your push foot has to be within a 3 by 3ft box bordered by the start line.
In the end, for push or ramps starts, and even running the cones, there will always be an advantage for strength and fitness.
With ramp starts if you have an explosive pull off of the handles with alot of strength behind it, you will be faster. If you are a good transition pumper, a strong explosive pump will help. If you get 2 quick pumps in off of the bottom of the ramp like LUCA, you will be faster.
With push starts, an explosive set of pushes will make you faster than the guy who is not so gifted. But, setting the number of pushes may even things out...a little. Interesting idea.
With NCDSA cyberslalom, the timer starts 15ft from the first cone and the timer starts when you cross the line and your push foot has to be within a 3 by 3ft box bordered by the start line.
In the end, for push or ramps starts, and even running the cones, there will always be an advantage for strength and fitness.
With ramp starts if you have an explosive pull off of the handles with alot of strength behind it, you will be faster. If you are a good transition pumper, a strong explosive pump will help. If you get 2 quick pumps in off of the bottom of the ramp like LUCA, you will be faster.
With push starts, an explosive set of pushes will make you faster than the guy who is not so gifted. But, setting the number of pushes may even things out...a little. Interesting idea.
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- Lone Stranger Racing
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Re: 36 cone cyber
I'll second this motion. For everyones safety I skate alone so I need variety:-)Michael Dong wrote: So lets get this 36 cone thing started so we can add some variety.
Pushing into the course makes this more of an exercise in retaining speed than powering up to speed. With metric spacing it just seems more "international". Different for the sake of being different??
As such this course would differentiate SS.com from what the community at ncdsa has successfully established.
Just my thoughts as a newbie, The rain is washing my cyber course as I write. Can't wait for clean, saltless pavement!!
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- Corky - World Ranking Master Mind
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Michael,
The 15ft start from the cyber slalom is ok for getting 3 good pushes if you are quick and strong. I have a hard time getting my 3 good pushes. For a beginner even to get 2. It seems like the weaker you are the more it punish you. Like it wasn't punish enough being a slower slalomer from the beginning. My idea (3 pushes period) will not help the quick and stronger skaters but it would help all the others. Most important no one loose.
Actually the more I think about it the better it gets.
The 15ft start from the cyber slalom is ok for getting 3 good pushes if you are quick and strong. I have a hard time getting my 3 good pushes. For a beginner even to get 2. It seems like the weaker you are the more it punish you. Like it wasn't punish enough being a slower slalomer from the beginning. My idea (3 pushes period) will not help the quick and stronger skaters but it would help all the others. Most important no one loose.
Actually the more I think about it the better it gets.
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- Moscow-Washington
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<b>Michael</b>,
How about 36 cones at 5.5 ft? Let’s not even think metric anymore. No one is doing it.
Cone penalties are fine with me. 0.1 sec?
Timing: first to last cone. It’ll save some distance…
Push in distance… same 15 ft?
PS. I’m not going to attend any US races this season.
<b>Corky</b>, what you propose is cool, and I can’t deny it’d be easier for most people. But I don’t think it’ll change anything. Except that everyone’s times will be better.
One push (9.1), three pushes (8.2), four pushes+2 feet (8.0)…same torture, same low-end exercise…the only difference is time.
I ran French Siber during lunch today. 8.02 sec + 5 cones down and 8.31 clean. No time to run the other way. So, not declaring nothing.
Two straight runs (pushing in hard, not going around cones) yielded 9.1 and 9.3 sec. Thus, going around the cones is significantly faster. The difference is in the second half of the course.
Too bad we lost our Cyber Spot last year. Outdoors is 0.1-.2 sec slower even on a perfect surface. I’ll try 36-coneSiber next week.
__________________________
Sunday update.
(8.26 + .2+9.05)/2=8.755
How about 36 cones at 5.5 ft? Let’s not even think metric anymore. No one is doing it.
Cone penalties are fine with me. 0.1 sec?
Timing: first to last cone. It’ll save some distance…
Push in distance… same 15 ft?
PS. I’m not going to attend any US races this season.
<b>Corky</b>, what you propose is cool, and I can’t deny it’d be easier for most people. But I don’t think it’ll change anything. Except that everyone’s times will be better.
One push (9.1), three pushes (8.2), four pushes+2 feet (8.0)…same torture, same low-end exercise…the only difference is time.
I ran French Siber during lunch today. 8.02 sec + 5 cones down and 8.31 clean. No time to run the other way. So, not declaring nothing.
Two straight runs (pushing in hard, not going around cones) yielded 9.1 and 9.3 sec. Thus, going around the cones is significantly faster. The difference is in the second half of the course.
Too bad we lost our Cyber Spot last year. Outdoors is 0.1-.2 sec slower even on a perfect surface. I’ll try 36-coneSiber next week.
__________________________
Sunday update.
(8.26 + .2+9.05)/2=8.755
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SiberCyber
Vlad,
All sounds good. 5.5ft, 15ft push is a groove.
Your French Cyber times are lightning fast. Some personal issues may keep me from racing overseas until after July. If there is a way, I will be at Paris but it does not look promising right now.
Michael
All sounds good. 5.5ft, 15ft push is a groove.
Your French Cyber times are lightning fast. Some personal issues may keep me from racing overseas until after July. If there is a way, I will be at Paris but it does not look promising right now.
Michael
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- Timing Guru
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hello
Vlad, Why will you not be attending any US races this year? You got something against us gringos?
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- Moscow-Washington
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- Etienne
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Re: 36 cone cyber
tod oles wrote:With metric spacing it just seems more "international". Different for the sake of being different??
Well metric does actually make it international, as we can't find tools in feet to mark the ground and we have to do all kinds of conversions as everybody just want to start having fun... The last time we did a NCDSA cyber session here in Paris we had lots of fun, made terrible times and DQed almost all the times. Very funny though. But maybe more useful to optimise the pushing than the pumping. Somewhat a difficult specific discipline requiring a long learning not very strongly related to slalom racing...
However, back home i check everything and of course we had played with a start box 5cm too big, etc. so i did not post any (terrible) times.
Certainly a good thing in itselftod oles wrote:As such this course would differentiate SS.com from what the community at ncdsa has successfully established.
If you like to know: NCDSA is rather alien unfriendly, not just because some conservative male isolationist heroes are there, but try to enter into a conversation between 111.524.666.556 from Dakota who signs "T" about "JK" havin jerked saturday and (two pages later) JK saying " " made a false start or has a big butt...
the Riderz style "French" Cyberslalom was actually created by an american person and an experienced NCDSA Cyberslalom participant (hope this does not sound too strangely politically correct ), his proposition was a success because it is simple, fun, consistant and competitive: If you can pump you can do it. Means you will do times revealing fairly your racer's skill as soon as the first session. Then you will generally improve from one session to the next, because you will actually get better.
Because it concentrates on the core slalom skill, that cyberslalom is a serious complement or alt to the worldwide ranking, i mean it.
When you see your times lists after a session it says it all: sometimes you can do 3 or 4 times exactly the same result, you will not improve a 1000th of second your time if you don't improve your pumping technique or your set-up.
However, we need diversity: what about starting here a difficult unlimited push 40 cones 1m60 moderated by Vlad or John, and a 2m athletic one maderated by Richie Carrasco or Kenny ? That would make sense.
Last edited by Etienne de Bary on Wed Jul 21, 2004 4:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Gecko Decks
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Hi Etienne,
Can you tell me what the French Cyber rules are? I might as well do it while I am in France! I am living at 1650m so I wonder how that will affect my times... Apart from the fact that skating up here is hard work!
Can you tell me what the French Cyber rules are? I might as well do it while I am in France! I am living at 1650m so I wonder how that will affect my times... Apart from the fact that skating up here is hard work!
http://www.geckodecks.com
Seismic.
Khiro /NITRO Bearings,
Decent Hardware
http://www.headblade.com/Merchant2/merc ... IL=drayton
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- Etienne
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original rules are to be found here
http://www.riderz.net/viewtopic.php?t=2918
This is also where you will post your time.
I must have posted them somewhere on this forum too...
Basically a flat ground no wind... 40 cones in line at 1m80 (centerset) unlimited pushing (on flat) time goes from the first cone to the last cone. (ideally tapeswitches or a pal who rides along with timer in hand, timing yourself with a hand-timer is a handicap)
Every cone down or off line=1/10th of second penalty, more than six down=DQ (this has been renegociated/clarified recently)
If you can't find a flat spot or if the wind blows you make an average of one way and other way.
You may push as long as you wish and start pumping before the cones too, but 40 cones is a long way to go so don't use all your forces before...
beginners-slalomers will do times in the 15" to 17" range, times under 10" are excellent, under 9" some of the best.
You may use your real name as pseudo if you wish to when you subscribe to riderz.net, you may post in english
looking forward to read your time !
http://www.riderz.net/viewtopic.php?t=2918
This is also where you will post your time.
I must have posted them somewhere on this forum too...
Basically a flat ground no wind... 40 cones in line at 1m80 (centerset) unlimited pushing (on flat) time goes from the first cone to the last cone. (ideally tapeswitches or a pal who rides along with timer in hand, timing yourself with a hand-timer is a handicap)
Every cone down or off line=1/10th of second penalty, more than six down=DQ (this has been renegociated/clarified recently)
If you can't find a flat spot or if the wind blows you make an average of one way and other way.
You may push as long as you wish and start pumping before the cones too, but 40 cones is a long way to go so don't use all your forces before...
beginners-slalomers will do times in the 15" to 17" range, times under 10" are excellent, under 9" some of the best.
You may use your real name as pseudo if you wish to when you subscribe to riderz.net, you may post in english
looking forward to read your time !
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- Pierre Gravel
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Re: 36 cone cyber
Hi Etienne, I (longboardeur, my avatar on Riderz) started the riderz cyber slalom but I'm not an American, I'm Canadian! (not that there is anything wrong with that )etienne de Bary wrote:The Riderz style "French" Cyberslalom was actually created by an american person and an experienced NCDSA Cyberslalom participant (hope this does not sound too strangely politically correct ), his proposition was a success because it is simple, fun, consistant and competitive
By the way we will make more kebbek slalom boards soon...
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- Etienne
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Oh, ... here in Europe we think People who live on the american continent are "Americans", (some "North Americans", some "South Americans", some of the north american "USians" some canadians, as "USians" sounds quite like a politically correct barbarism, and we like nasty barbarisms better than PC barbarisms, we say "americain des Etats-Unis" more often - sometimes we forget to specify "des Etats-Unis", but we know we sould, (not that there is anything wrong with that )-). From this point of view "American Person" should apply to you, shouldn't it ?
Just meant to say you invented the "French" Cyber not just from scratch, but as the essence of the previous cyber you had experienced.
Pour les planches : super !
Long live Kebbek, "Je vous ai compris" !
Just meant to say you invented the "French" Cyber not just from scratch, but as the essence of the previous cyber you had experienced.
Pour les planches : super !
Long live Kebbek, "Je vous ai compris" !
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- azsuprasm
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I, like Michael D. have read the posts recently about the EuroCyberSlalom (ECS). Interesting concept! I agree that ECS is more an excersize in consistency and speed maintenence than accelleration and strength with the ACS.
In either case, they're both competitions that individuals can enter & participate without having to travel, with very specific rules to keep things as equal as they can be from site-to-site.
I post on both sites, and I'm currently working on establishing an International Standard type of individual competition:
Flat-land Un-assisted Self-propelled Skateboard Maximum Velocity (in MPH, but convertable to KPH).
I'll outline the very specific (and very SIMPLE) rules in another forum on this site: Competition Rules: "The Trap"
It's still in it's development stage, but what we've got so far is pretty cool. Thanks go to 70's skate legends C.Chaput and Chris Yandall for helping me to work out the bugs and "discuss" all the altenatives.
In the end, I hope "The Trap" will answer the question:
"How fast can you get that skateboard going on your own power?"
See y'all at "The Trap".
-=S=-
In either case, they're both competitions that individuals can enter & participate without having to travel, with very specific rules to keep things as equal as they can be from site-to-site.
I post on both sites, and I'm currently working on establishing an International Standard type of individual competition:
Flat-land Un-assisted Self-propelled Skateboard Maximum Velocity (in MPH, but convertable to KPH).
I'll outline the very specific (and very SIMPLE) rules in another forum on this site: Competition Rules: "The Trap"
It's still in it's development stage, but what we've got so far is pretty cool. Thanks go to 70's skate legends C.Chaput and Chris Yandall for helping me to work out the bugs and "discuss" all the altenatives.
In the end, I hope "The Trap" will answer the question:
"How fast can you get that skateboard going on your own power?"
See y'all at "The Trap".
-=S=-
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- Etienne
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- ISSA President 2011-2024
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Greetings to all...
This "slalom" event/thingey is so cool!
As someone who lives in the styx and has to slalom solo all the time, this format opens up a whole new world.
Have to admit though that I'm one of the dummy's who skipped these threads due to the name....It should be settled.
I'm going straight out now to set up the tight course and look forward to pushing it and comparing times.
I am not sure exactly where to post the times, so if someone could enlighten me it would be appreciated
Once again thanks
This "slalom" event/thingey is so cool!
As someone who lives in the styx and has to slalom solo all the time, this format opens up a whole new world.
Have to admit though that I'm one of the dummy's who skipped these threads due to the name....It should be settled.
I'm going straight out now to set up the tight course and look forward to pushing it and comparing times.
I am not sure exactly where to post the times, so if someone could enlighten me it would be appreciated
Once again thanks