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THEE_wizardI had the same problem at the end of last year, never tried them into foam but had them consistent on tramp, even with different grabs. I found that the way it's set on skis versus tramp is very different because your center of gravity is much lower because of the skis adding weight. When you do it on tramp it is actually more inverted because of where your weight is, so on snow it's almost a different trick. To compensate, you would obviously just not throw it so far back to be less inverted. I know just that won't help, so the best way to think of it on skis is to try just dropping your leading shoulder on the takeoff rather than your whole back like you would on tramp. Also contrary to what you want to do, leaning back, you actually want to come into the jump with a lot of shin pressure. If you do this, you can pull your feet forward in the air while you drop your lead shoulder giving you the cork while you spin, but it's really controlled by your movements and not just thrown where you think you should go. Pulling your feet in and forward will give you the force back into a corked spin much like someone doing a backflip on the ground would pull their legs up to flip back, rather than throwing their back toward the ground. I've personally learned this and that principle has helped a ton in learning and controlling tricks in the air. Good luck this season. Let us know when you get them.
THEE_wizardI had the same problem at the end of last year, never tried them into foam but had them consistent on tramp, even with different grabs. I found that the way it's set on skis versus tramp is very different because your center of gravity is much lower because of the skis adding weight. When you do it on tramp it is actually more inverted because of where your weight is, so on snow it's almost a different trick. To compensate, you would obviously just not throw it so far back to be less inverted. I know just that won't help, so the best way to think of it on skis is to try just dropping your leading shoulder on the takeoff rather than your whole back like you would on tramp. Also contrary to what you want to do, leaning back, you actually want to come into the jump with a lot of shin pressure. If you do this, you can pull your feet forward in the air while you drop your lead shoulder giving you the cork while you spin, but it's really controlled by your movements and not just thrown where you think you should go. Pulling your feet in and forward will give you the force back into a corked spin much like someone doing a backflip on the ground would pull their legs up to flip back, rather than throwing their back toward the ground. I've personally learned this and that principle has helped a ton in learning and controlling tricks in the air. Good luck this season. Let us know when you get them.
.otto.What size jump should a cork 7 be thrown of for a first try?
.otto.What size jump should a cork 7 be thrown of for a first try?
THEE_wizardI had the same problem at the end of last year, never tried them into foam but had them consistent on tramp, even with different grabs. I found that the way it's set on skis versus tramp is very different because your center of gravity is much lower because of the skis adding weight. When you do it on tramp it is actually more inverted because of where your weight is, so on snow it's almost a different trick. To compensate, you would obviously just not throw it so far back to be less inverted. I know just that won't help, so the best way to think of it on skis is to try just dropping your leading shoulder on the takeoff rather than your whole back like you would on tramp. Also contrary to what you want to do, leaning back, you actually want to come into the jump with a lot of shin pressure. If you do this, you can pull your feet forward in the air while you drop your lead shoulder giving you the cork while you spin, but it's really controlled by your movements and not just thrown where you think you should go. Pulling your feet in and forward will give you the force back into a corked spin much like someone doing a backflip on the ground would pull their legs up to flip back, rather than throwing their back toward the ground. I've personally learned this and that principle has helped a ton in learning and controlling tricks in the air. Good luck this season. Let us know when you get them.
bedinskiI learned cork 7's this summer. My first 2 cork 7's had the exact same problem as you mentioned. What I did to correct this was really focus on the spin part of the cork 7 and not the flip at all. The slightest dip of the shoulder was able to get me into a true cork (head and feet level with each other) instead of a more D-spin like rotation that I was doing before. On skis barely any shoulder dip with get you off axis, where on a tramp the flip really has to be thrown much harder.
Probably not my best written response but hopefully this helps.