It feels like we're going back in time. Riding to the BMX track sitting on a Kashimas hard plastic seat was never fun on the way back. Flite made some checkered seat covers to ease the pain. The Elina seat was a bit wider but still hard as a rock. Then I switched to the Odyssey Cobra seat for the longest time as it was comfortable. Then came the real sofas but they weighed a ton. Next trend, back to the skinny hard plastic seats but since they're rough on the ass after a full day of riding and hanging
Name: Navid Saleki
The 2012 Mirraco EDit comes with a 20.5" Top Tube and is one of the affordable complete bikes that you can take to the streets. For $ 359.99 (in the USA) you get a whole lot of bike. It's got a welded seatclamp, mid BB, 2 tube cro-mo frame and 6mm dropouts. The fork is a tapered cromoly one, the cranks are three-piece VISE ones in black and it's got a 9T cromo 1 piece driver in the back and 25T alloy sprocket in the front. The bikes comes in three colourways: Flat Black, Flat Grape and Flat Sand.
Yes, it’s hard to divert your eyes away from the coolest looking grip ever! OK, maybe not the coolest but they are available in a rainbow of colors and will stay securely on your bar thanks to the alloy lock rings and end caps.
Chris Janis makes it on the cover of the new DIG. Shot at Catty Woods, PA. by Rob Dolecki. What else is new for issue 85?
It's appreciated when magazines go out of their way to shoot a covershot. This one was taken by Walter Pieringer and is more than just a photo of a guy jumping a bike. It's Hoffman Bikes rider Ben Hennon doing a superman over his boss Mat Hoffman himself doing a burnout in his 1976 Lincoln Continental with a ramp attached to it. The move has left some black marks on Mat's driveway but the story behind that is well worth it. Time to frame that photo and put it on your wall.
For skateboard shoe companies to grow their market, they can adapt other sports. This is being done by loads, but they're not all as successful as a brand like DC. They've been running a BMX program forever and are currently sponsoring riders like Dave Mirra, Maddog, Corey Bohan, Edwin, Biz, Allan Cooke, Doyle, Simms and many others. They're organising trips for their riders, support the BMX media and sponsor events with their product. BMX is an extra market for DC, but they're giving back, and that's what matters.
After doing a BMX 'zine for ten years (1987 - 1996) FATBMX made it on the internet. The year was 1998. Here to stay.