
Very few people made it through the Gauntlet of Death during our Texas Toast Jam but lucky for us, Gary Young strapped on the GoPro to give everyone a taste of victory.
Originally shown during the credits of our Texas Toast Jam Coverage.
Very few people made it through the Gauntlet of Death during our Texas Toast Jam but lucky for us, Gary Young strapped on the GoPro to give everyone a taste of victory.
Originally shown during the credits of our Texas Toast Jam Coverage.
Sunday Bikes had a pretty good showing at our Texas Toast Jam and this video shows some of the highlights from their team.
Congratulations to Matthias Dandois for taking home first place in last weekend’s BMX Masters. You can watch his final run above and check out some pics he sent us as well.
Cult just dropped this edit of Chase Hawk testing out Austin’s newest skatepark. The place looks dialed and Chase does everything in this edit from blasting quarters to lacing tech lines.
Tom Dugan lives in a fun house. Take the tour over at ESPN.
Sparky’s Distribution just uploaded this rad photo gallery from their trip out to the Texas Toast Jam. Hoang Tran and Kyle Hart have some great shots in this so make sure to flip through.
Plus Size BMX interviews Aaron Ross during a shop stop with the Etnies crew!
Here’s one of our recent ads with Gary Young throwing a tabe in the deep end. Hit up those download links and set it as your desktop’s wallpaper!
Photo by Justin Kosman.
A common complaint people seem to have is they “never” have anything to ride. They have few local spots and after a while, they have the tendency of getting stale and boring. If you’ve ever found yourself in this predicament, then perhaps this month’s ODSY Vision might help inspire you to take a different approach to the old quest of finding spots. Adam Banton will be your tour guide and if you haven’t done so already, add him on Facebook and Twitter.
Tom Dugan, Joe Rich, Ruben Alcantra and HUGE dirt hips/quarters in one video?! What a great way to start the weekend. Enjoy!
Our goal with the Tomahawk was to develop a new front load stem that used a modified version of the steerer tube clamping system found in the Elementary Stem. This approach would eliminate sharp bolts and edges at the back, keep the weight down, and still allow riders to tighten and loosen the bars and steerer tube independently from one another. The Tomahawk wedge system is captured in the body, allowing riders to remove it only when maintenance is necessary. The steerer tube is clamped by tightening one 6mm hex key bolt on the side of the stem.
We also set out specifically to design the stem around its own unique forging blanks for both the cap and body. Forging maximizes the strength of the material, and helps keep the manufacturing costs down. Machining the same shape from a block of aluminum would be weaker, it would be wasteful of material, and the retail price would be unreasonable. The unique nature of the stem’s tomahawk-inspired front load body shape allows it to look “normal” whether it is installed traditionally or upside-down to raise the bars.
The end result is a strong, lightweight, front load stem with a series of unique features and the aesthetics that Chase asked us for.