I throw rollers like your second one, (I call it a wheel roller.) It is the
easiest to learn, imo and most consistent. One of the keys is having the
right disc for it, though. I lost mine last year – Star Valkyrie 170 g. I
have tried other discs since, but with not as much luck. I guess Star
plastic must be the way to go for them. They seem to grab well.?
do rollers work on dusty and hard dirt as well?
Dustin- yes, generally the main requirement for a roller is terrain that is
hard enough so the disc can roll without slowly down immediately (tall,
thick grass) or hitting something that stops or derails it (bushes, trees,
rocks, etc.) In the case of the latter you need to determine if the area
you’ll be rolling on is free enough of objects to give you a high enough
percentage of getting through cleanly.
great video, but what’s the strange effects going on with the focus and
stuff? it kind of makes me dizzy…
What was that second disc??
I throw rollers like your second one, (I call it a wheel roller.) It is the
easiest to learn, imo and most consistent. One of the keys is having the
right disc for it, though. I lost mine last year – Star Valkyrie 170 g. I
have tried other discs since, but with not as much luck. I guess Star
plastic must be the way to go for them. They seem to grab well.?
do rollers work on dusty and hard dirt as well?
Dustin- yes, generally the main requirement for a roller is terrain that is
hard enough so the disc can roll without slowly down immediately (tall,
thick grass) or hitting something that stops or derails it (bushes, trees,
rocks, etc.) In the case of the latter you need to determine if the area
you’ll be rolling on is free enough of objects to give you a high enough
percentage of getting through cleanly.
great video, but what’s the strange effects going on with the focus and
stuff? it kind of makes me dizzy…
Nice.
roll those balls in my mouth man u sexxxy