How This Guy Invents Crazy Skateboards For Custom Tricks
Released on 07/26/2023
[upbeat rock music]
[skateboard thuds]
[Narrator] Inventing a skateboard trick
is difficult enough but this man home makes boards
that are part of the tricks themselves.
[upbeat rock music]
The most difficult board I've worked on
was the tri-fold 360 flip I did recently.
Yeah, that one I had to make at least five iterations
of the board, you know, it constantly break.
[Narrator] Meet Matt Tomasello, professional skateboarder
and amateur engineer, reinventing the sport
with a unique approach.
I think the board modification just adds a layer
of complexity that kind of steps away
from competitive skateboarding
and more into like an art form.
It's definitely to me the most interesting skateboarding.
There are no rules, probably skateboard
as long as I can physically do it.
Now to fall on the ground.
[Matt thuds]
Oh boy.
[upbeat rock music]
[Narrator] Matt spends countless hours testing
any of his 50 plus boards all in a space as DIY
as his own work.
This is a semi-abandoned parking lot.
Me and my friends built some ramps here to skate on.
This one did not take me long to make,
but it took me forever to land the trick
that I intended to do with it.
You do half a flip and then it does one
and a half flips back.
When I land on it upside down
or it hits the ground upside down,
it pops and it can, [skateboard thuds]
[grunts] Oh God. [chuckles]
I knew that was gonna happen too.
I wanted to design a board
where the truck goes around the entire skateboard.
There's one spring loaded hinge
and that should just propel the truck around the board.
This one took a while to figure out.
Freely flips both ways.
Done a few tricks where both sides flip at the same time
and sometimes in opposite directions.
This one's probably my favorite. [chuckles]
[upbeat rock music]
[Matt thuds]
[Interviewer] Is it a lot easier on your body
just talking about it?
I honestly would rather destroy my body.
I'm awkward. [laughs]
[upbeat rock music]
[Matt thudding] [skateboard thudding]
[skateboard clattering]
As far as like taking a beating.
[skateboard thuds] The board will usually break
before I'm physically harmed enough to stop.
[skateboard thuds] [Matt thuds]
I think falling is like the most important trick
in skateboarding. [Matt thuds]
It's an inevitable thing that's gonna happen.
If you learn how to fall correctly,
you're gonna be able to just keep trying.
[Narrator] Always looking to test a new idea.
Matt volunteered to engineer a new board from scratch
in his bedroom workshop.
So this is my room and this is where I do on my building.
Yeah, I got a little work bench over here
and giant stack of boards usually donated
from local skateboarders and friends.
So I've been thinking about this board
where half of the board falls down on cables
and a lever brings it back up for you.
Land. [upbeat rock music]
I have a sketchbook with a bunch of my old stuff
but lately I've just been building like rough drafts.
Sketching, it is way harder.
I wish I had like a CAD program
I could just test the physics on,
but maybe I'll get there one day.
Sometimes, I get inspiration if I see a machine
or one of the boards.
I got inspiration by seeing a gate in somebody's backyard.
Draw a line. I think it needs to be cut.
I decide where to cut based on how long the lever is
and how much time I have for the board
to come back together.
It's usually working with anywhere
from like a half a second to two maximum.
But if it's just flat ground trick in the air,
you really only have like a half a second, of course,
of a second, calculated it. [chuckles]
[upbeat rock music]
Nothing needs to be perfect,
just needs to work once. [skateboard piece thuds]
Have a spare nose, might as well use it
instead of cutting up a new one.
Reduce reuse. [skateboard clacking]
So they overlap because this would never hold anyone.
It's all a balancing act like weight distribution
from the front truck to the back truck.
Nothing's gonna work if there's anything in between
that can fold in.
And I'm just gonna drill the holes
where the cabling is gonna go. [drill whirring]
Probably spent like hundreds of hours
build different boards in here.
Just tinkering with things.
[upbeat rock music]
The first part I built,
I think it was just a single hinge attached to the truck.
I'm pop in the momentum causes it to do a heelflip late.
I saw the physics get altered from the moving part
and I was like, Oh, this is interesting.
You can use it to your advantage.
[upbeat rock music]
I've been in Boston my whole life.
There's not many spots.
There's skateboard, so you gotta work with what you got.
I think that's just natural progression.
How can I find a way to adapt to my environment
and make it interesting?
[skateboard scraping]
This is the self-Natas board.
There's this check on a skateboard called the Natas Spin
invented by Natas Kaupas.
He ollied onto a fire hydrant and grabbed a pole
and spun around and this is like way, way back.
Yo, Andy, what year did Natas do the Natas Spin?
[Andy] '86, '87.
Okay.
This one when you ollie, the back truck
is attached to a metal bracket.
You can stall and you can spin around
even manual down a bank.
This one just took a while to figure out the proper angle
for the stop on the L brackets and spring load tension.
[skateboard truck thuds]
as you want it to hit as soon as you're at the peak
of your ollie 'cause otherwise it's gonna kickback
and then just fold right back under.
This board is kinda like a book [chuckles], I guess.
The only trick I've ever done on this is a kickflip
where in the air it will open and close.
The momentum of it closing kind of finishes the last
like quarter of the flip.
It's pretty impractical for anything else. [chuckles]
This one actually did not take me long to make. [chuckles]
It's just cut in half with a spring loaded hinge.
Essentially just wind it up and you do a trick.
It's just release. [skateboard clattering]
You can flip the front or the back depending on
where your foot is, you can adjust the tension
so it'll close faster, slower, depending on the trick.
The other ones you saw where it was mostly
like flipping two coins,
the timing, it's impossible to stop it.
This one's actually more on track,
still working on this one.
It's supposed to do one and a half flips
and then bounce off these compression springs.
Can't quite figure out the timing of it
until a work in progress.
My success rate is probably, [tongue clicks]
I'd say about 20%, maybe 25.
[upbeat rock music] [skateboard thudding]
Gonna build a lever.
Luckily, I have some leftover parts for that.
We're gonna use some metal cabling
to bring back the second half of the board.
Threading the cabling through the holes,
giving in its track to reel back on.
[skateboard thread scraping]
My foot will essentially be on the lever
while I'm doing the trick and then it's going to slide off.
The reel's gonna retract when the lever closes
and that's what's going to cause the board
to come back together.
So now I'm just securing the cabling.
This clamp I made out of some old metal brackets.
It doesn't come flying off.
[drill whirring]
Now, I am gonna set the tension of the spring,
control how fast it's going to close,
and I usually adjust it like at the spot based on, you know,
how long the trick's taking. [chuckles]
[wire whizzing]
Not bad at all.
[Narrator] With his success rate in mind,
Matt returned to the skate park,
hopeful to make his new creation work.
[upbeat rock music] [clapperboard thuds]
So we're at the skate spot.
Just gonna try this board out.
I'm gonna try to slide down here,
have the board drop while sliding,
then reel back up [skateboard thuds]
right away.
[upbeat rock music] [skateboard thudding]
Oh my God.
[upbeat rock music]
[skateboard thuds]
[upbeat rock music] [skateboard thuds]
Yeah, I can't get over it.
You need weight in the front.
Might just have to take a different approach at it.
[skateboard scraping]
[skateboard thudding]
[grunts] That was close.
[upbeat rock music]
One slide didn't work, but luckily 5.0 worked out.
I think that's it.
[upbeat rock music]
[Narrator] No matter how many tries his boards can take
Matt loves the freedom of the process.
[upbeat rock music]
They're trying to make rules in the Olympics
and everything but you can do absolutely whatever you want.
Nobody can throw a flag on the field and say, [chuckles]
you know, you didn't do it right.
[upbeat rock music]
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