Washer
1 Respuesta 1 Puntaje |
Broken chassis, fixable or no. Please help. |
1 Respuesta 0 Puntaje |
How do I fix the axel, a couple of the rivets have fallen out |
2 Respuestas 0 Puntaje |
Lubrication is leaking out of wheels |
1 Respuesta 0 Puntaje |
Buckle Parts for Oxygen skates |
Herramientas
Estas son algunas de las herramientas comunes que se utilizaron para trabajar en este dispositivo. Es posible que no necesites todas las herramientas para cada procedimiento.
Background and Identification
Inline skates, or roller blades, are a type of roller skate used for inline skating. While quad skates have two front and two rear wheels, inline skates have two, three, four, or five wheels arranged in a single line, hence the 'inline' name. This design allows for greater speed and maneuverability over inline skates’ clunkier cousin, the roller skate. Inline skates are used for recreation, aggressive skating, inline hockey, artistic inline skating, and speed skating.
In 1849, Louis Legrange invented inline skates as an alternative to ice skates during periods of warm weather. The first pair of inline skates were difficult to turn and impossible to stop by users so the design never became commercially successful. In the late 1890s, “road skates” were developed by D. Napier & Son. These skates included two large wheels on each skate. Ernest Kahlert was granted the first inline skate patent in 1953. Kahlert’s skates were designed to perform like ice skates with individually cushioned wheels. In 1987, Rollerblade developed the first commercially available inline skates.
Inline roller skates are composed of a boot, frame, bearings, wheels, and brakes. The boot is worn on the user’s foot, and the boot is connected to a frame that keeps the skate’s wheels in place. Bearings permit the wheels to rotate and rubber or plastic brakes or “stops” allow users to stop on command.
Additional Information
- Wikipedia: Inline Skates
- Wikipedia: Inline Skating
- Rollerblade USA