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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 1
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Impossible to Learn to Ride my 16" Uni?
Hi all,
I'm as new as can be to unicycling at all. I've always wanted to learn to do it, and I finally decided to get one. I know it's against all advice there is, but I wanted to get a cheap one to learn on to see if I could do it and if I liked it before I shelled out a lot of money. So, I went on craigslist, found one for 20 bucks and got it. I'm having a horribly hard time trying to learn it. Here it is: (well I guess that will show up somewhere else. never used this site before) Anyway, I've put about 5 hours of practice into it, but it's still very hard to even get some rocking the pedals out of it. I'm practicing on my porch because it's cold and snowy here and I use a half-column type thing to get my balance and then take off from there to try to get some pedaling distance. At most I'm getting about 10 feet before I fall off. 10 feet might even be wishfull thinking. I think I'm getting an average of about 5-7 and then I'm off it. I was reading that after about 5 hours of practice most people should be able to cross the length of a gym, and I'd be nowhere near that. Is it because of the severely small wheel size? 16"? Is that implausible to learn on? Or am I just extremely slow at this? Thanks for any help anyone can give me! |
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#2 |
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Bellevue, WA
Age: 43
Posts: 846
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It's not the optimal unicycle for you to learn with (unless your 7 or 8 years old), but it should do the trick. Your seat may be a bit low, when your sitting on it, with your pedals at 6 and 12 o'clock, your bottom leg should not have much of a bend in it, that will help you keep more weight on the saddle which is important.
The first time I tried to learn I put in close to twenty hours, finally gave up because I wasn't getting it. A few months later I tried again and finally got it. If you keep trying, you will get there. Usually when your feeling like your never going to get it, you are close to breaking through
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#3 |
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Totally Doable
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Berkeley, CA
Age: 44
Posts: 3,245
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There is no magic number to describe how long it takes to learn to ride. I've seen someone pick it up after half an hour; I've seen others take 20+ hours to get it.
I've taught plenty of kids on 16" unicycles, so that's not the problem, per se. It's probably pretty small for you, so make sure you have the seat post up as high as it will go; a low seatpost makes it harder to learn. To the extent that you can, make sure everything is tight so the unicycle isn't fighting you when you try to ride. But other than that, just spend more time on it. Put your weight on the seat as much as you can, and look out at the horizon rather than down at the ground. Hold your arms out for balance, and try to get to a fast walking pace (riding slower is harder). Good luck! |
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#4 |
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Juggle-cuber Extraordinaire
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Pocatello, Idaho
Age: 21
Posts: 90
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Just my quick observation, it looks like your seat is way to low. If your seat is already as high as it goes, it will be difficult to learn or move around at all (having the right seat height can make a HUGE difference). I'm not sure that the small tire is optimal either (it's definitely a kid's unicycle, and one that wouldn't last long at that).
If you've always wanted to learn to ride a unicycle it'll definitely be worth your time to invest $100 into a decent uni. You don't need this one to see if you can do it (because absolutely anyone can do it). And I can't imagine that you wouldn't like unicycling (unless you were stuck with a hard to ride unicycle). |
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#5 |
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Respiring Unicyclist
Join Date: May 2008
Location: København
Posts: 417
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It took me ~15 practice sessions at 1-2 hours per session.
Stick with it; you'll get it. |
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#6 |
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"The dude that went to India"
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Leicestershire, UK Unicycles: 12" Bunnycycle, 24" Qu-Ax Cross
Age: 29
Posts: 474
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"The length of a gym after 5 hours" thing might be realistic if you have professional coaching from a unicycle teacher, but I think you're doing fine for someone who's self-taught.
I learnt on a 24", which a lot of people will tell you is too big for a learner, I think the general consensus is that smaller wheels are easier to learn on than larger ones. That said, you'll definitely want something a bit bigger when you get good and want to do some serious riding. ![]() Keep it up! |
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#7 |
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show me the muni!
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Rochester, New York
Age: 37
Posts: 1,274
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Where about do you live? If you happen to be near someone in these forums, you might be able to buy/borrow a 20" or 24" learner unicycle from them.
I remember the "keep you weight on the seat" was really good advice for me. |
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#8 | |
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Unicycle Advocate
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Taranaki, New Zealand
Age: 33
Posts: 1,631
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Quote:
Make sure there is enough pressure in the tire. Everyone is different at learning times, but your own learning time might take longer if you do not ensure your equipment matches your size- e.g. optimum seat height. With unicycling almost anything you think is impossible is possible or will become possible with more practise! |
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#9 |
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unicycle father
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kalamazoo, MI
Age: 41
Posts: 111
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I live in Kalamazoo and would be able to help and ride with any time you want. I have quite a few unis to go around and do happen to have a spare 24". Took me ~ 2 weeks of 1-2 hours a day.
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#10 |
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SWUM unicyclist
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Exeter, Devon
Posts: 1,042
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That's the same uni my son has, it fits him. He hasn't managed to ride it independently either. He is 3 years old.
That uni is not tall enough for an average adult, even good riders struggle to ride a tiny uni with their knees all scrunched up.
__________________
South West Unicycle Meet www.uk.unicyclist.com/swum.html |
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#11 |
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Official POEE Unicyclist
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Whittier, CA, USA
Age: 28
Posts: 136
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It took me about 10 days at 4 or so hours of practice a day to teach myself how to ride my 20" Torker CX, and it wasn't until day 7 or so that I was actually able to ride forward any sort of distance. Now that I can ride that seems silly, but I have terrible balance and had never done anything like this before---when I was a kid I was too scared to ride my bike without my hands on the handlebars, and every time I let go I would freak out and grab them immediately.
Anyway! To be encouraging: nothing is impossible. Some things are very hard, but nothing is impossible. Give yourself a week or two and you'll be riding that tiny thing in no time and wishing you had bought a better uni to learn on. |
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#12 | |
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Unicycle Daze - Rob Campbell
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Bremerton, WA
Age: 25
Posts: 1,264
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Quote:
Still chuckling even now..
__________________
The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is all comprehensible. The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. -AE Last edited by SpaceFmK; 2010-01-20 at 07:59 PM. |
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#13 |
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reads trails rather than books
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Österreich
Age: 27
Posts: 1,222
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I also think that the uni is way too small for you and that's the main problem. Because of the small wheel you also have quite short cranks which make it even more difficult to learn. Longer Cranks mean more control and therefore easier learning.
__________________
Beschleunigungen werden in m/s^2 gemessen. m^2/s gibt vielleicht die Arbeitsgeschwindigkeit eines Fließenlegers an, aber sicher keine Beschleunigung. (Yeti) |
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#14 |
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Patrick
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Mebane "Mebbin", NC
Age: 37
Posts: 46
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Hey, How's the learning going on the 16"er? I just started a website that you might find helpful. It's at http://learntounicycle.blogspot.com/
Don't give up - you'll get it.
__________________
http://learntounicycle.blogspot.com/ - 50 video tutorials, from riding to gliding, to help you learn to unicycle or improve your skills! http://ashevillemunifest.webs.com/ Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication - Leonardo da Vinci |
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#15 |
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Some call me Kevin
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Lakewood, CA
Age: 41
Posts: 920
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UNCunis' website is very cool and full of resources....
Try riding along a wall, fence or railing that you can touch for balance while you get used to the feel. I got my 20" learner on craig's list for $20 too! Hard to find at that price but might be worth a little dough for something bigger. After you learn to ride you can take some time to pick out a good one that will be worth the bread to you.
__________________
---------------------------------------------- Art is a misspelled rat. "The unicyclist is the purest form of rebel"
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