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  1. singelingtracks on

    Oh God never land front first. Great way to die.

    Back wheel first if it’s a big drop, watch how trials riders do drops to flat / street riders .

    or both at the same time for ramped landings / smaller hits.

  2. minnesotajersey on

    Flat or back first.

    Though I just watched Wibmer do a ski slope run and he landed a LONG jump front-first on groomed ski snow. Insane.

  3. Gonna go against the grain with the other commenters here. In general you always want front wheel down slightly before back wheel. Lets your suspension cycle more naturally and fork takes the initial hit before the main compression force transitions to the rear. Gets the front tire down and tracking first for best traction. Push the bars out as you roll the drop then compress your arms back in as the front wheel hits to keep your center of gravity centered as the force rolls into the rear, then let your legs absorb the rest. Don’t just lean back and leave it all to your legs. You’ll throw off your CG.

    Landing both at same time (or even worse rear wheel first) slams the fork down harder and throws your weight forward causing instability on roll out. Plus the fork isn’t at the right angle to cycle naturally. Sudden forward weight shift to an uncompressed fork with reduced traction = bad time.

  4. kitnerboyredoubt on

    Hitting front wheel first is a bad habit to get into. Things can go sideways real fast. That being said if you’re just doing it screwing around to learn a new skill it can be useful from a bike handling standpoint just to learn how the bike reacts. Or if you’re trying to dial in your bonky jibby skills ala 50/01.

  5. Chance_Society_6927 on

    Sloped landing = front wheel first slightly.

    Flat drop = both same times or rear wheel first to soften the blow

  6. Sea-Seaweed1701 on

    It is sooooo much softer landing both wheels at the same time. I can’t believe this is not universally accepted!

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