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What is it called when you ride around on your front wheel?
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What is it called when you ride around on your front wheel?
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I know a wheelie is when the front wheel is in the air but does it have a different name for when the back wheel is in the air?
tricks
New contributor
add a comment |
I know a wheelie is when the front wheel is in the air but does it have a different name for when the back wheel is in the air?
tricks
New contributor
On a BMX it's called anose manual
. You've taggedroad-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.
– Diado
12 hours ago
5
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
1
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago
add a comment |
I know a wheelie is when the front wheel is in the air but does it have a different name for when the back wheel is in the air?
tricks
New contributor
I know a wheelie is when the front wheel is in the air but does it have a different name for when the back wheel is in the air?
tricks
tricks
New contributor
New contributor
edited 12 hours ago
David Richerby
14.1k33969
14.1k33969
New contributor
asked 12 hours ago
user43208user43208
412
412
New contributor
New contributor
On a BMX it's called anose manual
. You've taggedroad-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.
– Diado
12 hours ago
5
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
1
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago
add a comment |
On a BMX it's called anose manual
. You've taggedroad-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.
– Diado
12 hours ago
5
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
1
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago
On a BMX it's called a
nose manual
. You've tagged road-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.– Diado
12 hours ago
On a BMX it's called a
nose manual
. You've tagged road-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.– Diado
12 hours ago
5
5
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
1
1
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Rolling along balancing on the front wheel is called a "nose manual".
If it's braking to a stop while balancing on the wheel it's a "stoppie".
If it's braking to a stop suddenly with the rear wheel lifting and no front wheel rolling it's called an "endo".
New contributor
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
Rolling along balancing on the front wheel is called a "nose manual".
If it's braking to a stop while balancing on the wheel it's a "stoppie".
If it's braking to a stop suddenly with the rear wheel lifting and no front wheel rolling it's called an "endo".
New contributor
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Rolling along balancing on the front wheel is called a "nose manual".
If it's braking to a stop while balancing on the wheel it's a "stoppie".
If it's braking to a stop suddenly with the rear wheel lifting and no front wheel rolling it's called an "endo".
New contributor
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Rolling along balancing on the front wheel is called a "nose manual".
If it's braking to a stop while balancing on the wheel it's a "stoppie".
If it's braking to a stop suddenly with the rear wheel lifting and no front wheel rolling it's called an "endo".
New contributor
Rolling along balancing on the front wheel is called a "nose manual".
If it's braking to a stop while balancing on the wheel it's a "stoppie".
If it's braking to a stop suddenly with the rear wheel lifting and no front wheel rolling it's called an "endo".
New contributor
New contributor
answered 12 hours ago
Hiram HackenbackerHiram Hackenbacker
3012
3012
New contributor
New contributor
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
2
2
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
Isn’t it an endo only if the rider’s center of gravity goes forward beyond the center axis of the stationary front tire while the rider has forward momentum to spare? Otherwise it could still be a stoppie.
– RoboKaren
10 hours ago
3
3
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
I'm with RoboKaren. Endo is short for end-over-end. It's a crash, or as RoboKaren eloquently puts it "forward momentum to spare"
– David D
9 hours ago
3
3
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
I've always seen endo used as the trick where you balance your weight over the front wheel, even 20 years ago, from many sources. It's commonly used as a dedicated move or part of other tricks like 180° pivots on the front wheel. Even if the origin is from uncontrolled spills, endo is definitely not exclusive to crashing.
– Gabriel C.
7 hours ago
add a comment |
user43208 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user43208 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user43208 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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On a BMX it's called a
nose manual
. You've taggedroad-bike
though, so I'm not sure what you'd call it on a road bike... I can't imagine doing it on anything other than a BMX or perhaps a trials bike.– Diado
12 hours ago
5
@Diado Anything you can do on a trials bike can be done on a road bike.
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
1
Also, I removed the "road-bike" tag as I suspect it's only there because the asker couldn't find anything better. user43208, if the question was supposed to be road-bike-specific, please edit your question to mention that in the question itself, and restore the tag. Thanks!
– David Richerby
12 hours ago
@DavidRicherby True, if you want it badly enough, I guess. I still can't imagine doing anything like that on anything but a BMX. I'm old fashioned, I suppose :)
– Diado
12 hours ago