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A '''trick box''' is a feature common to many ]s. It is a raised feature designed to allow a skateboarder to ] up onto one of its edges and ] off the far end of it. In its simplest form, it is a small ] slab sitting between 12 and 18 inches high by a few feet on each side. More elaborate versions will have been fitted with steel coping to reduce wear, both on the feature itself and on the riders' truck axles. It's also called a funbox. | A '''trick box''' is a feature common to many ]s. It is a raised feature designed to allow a skateboarder to ] up onto one of its edges and ] off the far end of it. In its simplest form, it is a small ] slab sitting between 12 and 18 inches high by a few feet on each side. More elaborate versions will have been fitted with steel coping to reduce wear, both on the feature itself and on the riders' truck axles. It's also called a funbox and can be made of wood and are usually on tabletops or on flatground. | ||
{{skateboarding-stub}} | {{skateboarding-stub}} |
Revision as of 06:20, 23 August 2006
A trick box is a feature common to many skateparks. It is a raised feature designed to allow a skateboarder to ollie up onto one of its edges and rail grind off the far end of it. In its simplest form, it is a small concrete slab sitting between 12 and 18 inches high by a few feet on each side. More elaborate versions will have been fitted with steel coping to reduce wear, both on the feature itself and on the riders' truck axles. It's also called a funbox and can be made of wood and are usually on tabletops or on flatground.
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