This qualifies as the most Aaron Kyro -ish video ever: 0:00 HEY GUYS! 0:19 Really good trick explanation 1:31 Strange sounds while rotating a board 1:49 Completely awkward scene 2:34 Strange looks to the camera 2:50 Speech turns into gibberish 3:07 First Try! 3:25 Skateboarding Made Simple reference 3:35 Throwing away the board while explaining something 4:13 Really obvious pun 4:37 Naming the rotation incorrectly (would be inward flip direction, not varial flip) 5:39 Mentioning something completely out of context
the younger kids have no idea how helpful videos like these are. growing up in the 90s, there was no smart phones to look up step-by-step youtube videos, breaking down the trick in slow-mo. I would have to buy videos & hope they taught the trick i was looking for. so when i was learning a trick & i was struggling i would have to go home & re-watch the video. im sure i am preaching to the choir for a lot of you guys, but its just amazing how much easier videos like these would help with the learning-curve of a new skater. Thanks for all your hard work Braille Team!
I was one of those kids in the early 90s who learned pressure flips both ways, I could barely see my small 39 millimeter wheels my pants were so big! HAHA!
Gotta say, appreciate all the vids, instructional and otherwise. I'm an old dude of 33, just now deciding to learn to skate, and I seriously Google "how to ollie", your vid popped up and i've been watching ever since. Granted it's only been like a cool 6 weeks, but proud to say I can fully ollie and almost pop shuv. Having trouble getting back on the board. Thanks dudes.
At age 28 you guys convinced me to try and skate. Something I wanted to do since I was a kid. I'm learning to roll around gaining some confidence on the board before ill do some ollies xD. Thanks guys keep up the good work! :)
Aaron, you're awesome and funny. I haven't skated in almost 20 years; but watching your videos, I definitely need to buy a real deck and give it a serious try. Probably a revival deck with Aaron Kyro wheels. Thanks for giving us the confidence and the information needed to have decent confidence and lots of good advice. Much appreciated!
I really need more of these tutorials, because I recently learned kickflips and heelflips right after, and know I would like to expand my flip tricks so these tutorials are great for me right now.
Thank you Aaron!!!! These are the videos that keep me subscribed. These and any type of video showing the Braille fam progressing. Seriously awesome job
I got lucky with this trick. I was just fucking around on my board one day and landed one without exactly knowing what I did and I kept getting them. Accidentally learned a new trick. They're so fun to do too
You guys are honestly the best, you guys have inspired me to start skating. My birthday is coming up on the 15th of this month and it'd be cool to get a free complete so I can begin my skating journey. Jk! But I really have been influenced by you guys to start skating and I hope one day I can be able to kick flip first try!
5:40 Aaron uses his low to high voice, subliminally showing his excitement for the water park being open. "Forget pressure flips, I need a water slide right about now!"
One of the easiest ways to understand the pressure flip is by seeing it for being what it technically is. It's basically a rear footed inward heelflip using the "pressure technique" which is found in the ollie impossible when doing it the old fashioned way by keeping a certain amount of pressure between both feet. With the original method of doing the ollie impossible,you kept a certain amount of pressure with both feet on the kick tail like with a normal ollie on the kick tail while about half of the front foot stayed on the nose while the other half of that same foot hung off the edge of that nose and just let it slide off whenever you would do the jump or ollie to make the board spring back and whip around the rear foot. While the impossible when used by this original method is a completely separate trick from the pressure flip,the same basic theory applies using that pressure based technique on keeping the board compressed between both feet in order to get a spring like reaction out of the skateboard to make it flip and spin in the desired way to make it do a pressure flip motion.
ClevexKGB I learned inwards when I didn't know any better and thought I was learning varial heels. I have noticed that there are a lot of people that claim they can inward heel but they are in fact doing pressure flips. I have even seen videos of people 'teaching' people inwards and they are doing pressure flips.
great video. do a 2.0 version when you get time please. My son who popped his first Ollie and learned all basic tricks and also varial flips...fakie flips (heel and kockflip) several grinds and slides as well as more minni ramp tricks than one can name all because of you is getting ticked Over the pressure flip he can get the best rotation with one foot but when he commits it all goes to the birds He's only eleven been skating for two years and wants to learn this trick . Thanks so much
+Lawrence Mammitzsch nah it's not that. It's when he is around he just doesn't seem to be into it as much as he was last summer. Who knows could just be me.
+Philip Philipp Pressure flip is hard at first its kinda frustrating! hah. check out my fs big spin rewind video please! ill be uploading more weird trick on my chann too!
Nobody in my high school or even local skate park knew how to do these, they were just puzzled by it. I would do them, and still do them, like it is easy as shooting a basketball. Idk, This was the first trick I ever learned and just learned it naturally. I eventually was and still am able to do them Fakie as well, For a while my friends would tell me it's an inward heelflip. Then word started going around it was a Pressure Flip (This was before people would just go straight up to the internet and search for anything and everything)
Aaron, you are awesome! You make it very entertaining to watch a tutorial that most would find typically boring. Keep up the great work, you guys are awesome.
I need some help trying to figure out what tricks to learn, I live on a dirt road in the country and the closest thing I have to a place to skate is a 7x7 concrete patio, i need some advise on which stationary tricks to learn first
I had the rotation down for many years, but I was never able to land it both feet, like this mental barrier. Until I figured out it's all about the pressure (silly right). So my advice for some of you: try to really slam/push/scoop your tail into the ground (unlike an ollie where you pop straight off with your backfoot) and it will be a lot easier to stay over the board.
hi aaron i have an idea for your youtube can you skate little wooden ice cream sticks or here in australia we call them paddle pop sticks. you would need like 2000 glued together slowly to make a deck then add grip and trucks
Pardon me, I'm new and was hoping to ask a question. Why does Aaron turn the graphics on his wheels in? Does it serve a purpose or is it just like lifting? In weight lifting superstitious lifters would turn the plates on the bar to face in, thinking they could lift more that way.
I never tried a pressure flips I know varial flip both 180 s both shuvs tree flip kickflip 720 flip once and Casper and primo some crazy 180 double varial flip out u think I should try it
personally I think you need your back foot more in the pocket and I do it with the ball of my big toe area but I taught myself this trick 12 years ago when it wasn't even a known trick....but putting your back foot in the diagonal position with the ball of your big toe area in the pocket might b easier
I was chillen at the water park, watching these 3 guys make a video at the skate park. The short guy was busting out pressure flips-a-pleanty while the taller guy was failing miserably and throwing skateboards at children.