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posted by Woods on Friday May 23 2014, @03:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the shark-is-the-best-kind-of-wheel dept.

A California-based company has a new kind of wheel for skateboards that delivers a novel shape and claims a special ride experience. This is the Shark Wheel, not circular, not square, but something more interesting. The wheels appear as square when in motion from a side view but the wheel geometry is more than that. The wheels feel circular to the rider, and viewing them along with more details may help to clear the mystique. The wheels are made of three strips each; these create a helical shape when they roll, and they form a sine wave pattern. When the wheels make contact with the ground, good things happen, say the team behind the wheels - the user gets speed, better grip, and a smoother ride.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @05:00PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @05:00PM (#46811)

    Yeah. Whoopee someone re-invented tire treads and find they can increase grip and alter rolling resistance (BTW I'd like to see proof that his "shark" wheel reduces rolling resistance).

    How is that innovative and how the heck is that reinventing the skateboarding experience?

    To me reinventing the skateboarding experience would be more like this sort of stuff - changing the skateboarding experience into something similar to a snowboarding experience: http://freebord.com/videos/ [freebord.com]

    I'm ok with "slashvertisements" if they are for genuinely interesting and innovative products. Not this stupid crap.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @05:09PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 23 2014, @05:09PM (#46813)

    I skate, it's true. But what percentage of soylentils (that's growing on me!) skate enough to make a slashvertisement worth the while?

    On the other hand, I heard about this awhile back too (maybe on Slashdot?) - I think it was during the company's original Kickstarter campaign [kickstarter.com]. It looks like they wildly succeeded with that, maybe in a large part due to guerilla emarketing, so I wouldn't rule out the slashvertisement totally... Now that they've funded the start-up costs, it's time for Round 2!

    As for evidence... watch the sales video(s). :)

    • (Score: 2) by Woods on Friday May 23 2014, @05:34PM

      by Woods (2726) <woods12@gmail.com> on Friday May 23 2014, @05:34PM (#46821) Journal

      It seemed interesting to me, if you looked past all the science behind the wheel and got to the three sentences with the "You can buy this" bit, then I am sad that you missed it. I highly encourage you to go back and check it out, apparently hydroplaning is an issue when skating in the rain, but these wheels help alleviate that.

      Also, I really wanted to get that department joke in there as a followup to the one yesterday at the same time.

      • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Saturday May 24 2014, @02:24AM

        by Reziac (2489) on Saturday May 24 2014, @02:24AM (#46967) Homepage

        What I immediately wondered is how this can be applied to bicycle and automotive tires, assuming the advantage is real. That could be a far bigger market.

        --
        And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
        • (Score: 2) by Woods on Saturday May 24 2014, @11:52PM

          by Woods (2726) <woods12@gmail.com> on Saturday May 24 2014, @11:52PM (#47208) Journal

          The only tire advancements (Aside from size, material, etc) that I can think of is this thing [youtube.com]. But I have not heard anything in the last couple years, who knows if that is actually in use anywhere.

          • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Sunday May 25 2014, @12:20AM

            by Reziac (2489) on Sunday May 25 2014, @12:20AM (#47214) Homepage

            Ah, thanks, I'd read about those but hadn't seen one. I'm wondering how it performs in mud, tho I imagine the hollow part could be designed somewhat self-cleaning.

            --
            And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
  • (Score: 2) by buswolley on Friday May 23 2014, @07:02PM

    by buswolley (848) on Friday May 23 2014, @07:02PM (#46855)

    I posted the article after stumbling onto it from a link on a page Soylent linked to in a story.
    I do not skate. I am not affiliated with a company profiting on skateboards or skateboarding.
    I thought it was interesting. Possibly.

    I know many think its cool just to hate on things.. Very hip. But please, enough with the accusation of "slashvertisments".

    --
    subicular junctures