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Thursday, July 5, 2018

Pump track COM_SITRA_META_A Combloux - Cycling sports, Specific ...
src: summer.combloux.com

A pump track is a type of off-road terrain for cycle sport consisting of a circuit of banked turns and features designed to be ridden completely by riders "pumping" - creating momentum by up and down body movements. They are relatively simple and cheap to construct, and cater to a wide variety of rider skill levels, so are popular in council owned parks and schools.


Video Pump track



History

The origins of the pump track are BMX trails of the 1970s and 1980s. Australian downhill racers began creating the new era pump tracks around 2002. The first new era pump track in the United States was built in 2004 at The Fix Bike Shop in Boulder, Colorado, by professional downhill bicyclist Steve Wentz.

Maps Pump track



Track design

Most pump tracks link a series of rollers to steeply bermed corners that bring cyclists back around. Tracks are commonly constructed from dirt, and can be as small as 10 x 30 feet, or to make them more durable may be paved.

Paved pump tracks also have the advantage that they can be ridden by skateboarders, in-line skaters, and foot-powered scooters.


pump track | Xanthi Mountain Bike Park
src: jester777.files.wordpress.com


Bikes

Since momentum, or speed, is gained by the rider pumping, such as on the down-slope of each roller, the best bikes to use have no suspension, which would absorb useful energy. Bikes usually have a rigid frame, such as BMX-style bikes, which most efficiently convert the rider's motions into forward thrust. Some bikes have been designed which are custom built for a pump track, with features such as an offset crank, which stabilizes the pedals, and lowers the rider's center of gravity.


Pump Track - Velosolutions pump track design, construction ...
src: velosolutions.com


See also

  • BMX bike riding
  • Dirt jumping
  • Glossary of cycling

Velosolutions builds a pump track in Thailand â€
src: cdn.bikemag.com


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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