I mentioned elsewhere that I had started collecting and learning to use yoyos this year. Freddy suggested I post some pics and talk about it, so here we go.
First off, yoyoing has changed dramatically i the last 20 years or so. It's been changing little by little ever since the first yoyos were made in the US, but there have been several really big changes since I was a kid.
1. Competitive yoyoing now has multiple divisions, and because of that several distinct classes of yoyos have arisen. Classic yoyo tricks are a blend of 1A (string tricks) and 2A (looping tricks), but there are even more divisions now. The yoyos are basically now 3 different types, and they don't much work for one another. String trick yoyos, looping yoyos, and offstring yoyos. I play mostly 1A - I like the intricacies.
2. Most modern yoyos now have ball bearings in them. It lets them spin longer, but also changes some of their other characteristics, like when and how they come back. This isn't really new, but it wasn't the default when I was a kid.
3. Not all yoyos come back because you give them a tug anymore. These are called "unresponsive" for obvious reasons. Wider string gaps and larger bearings make these yoyos spin longer and allow you to do some tricks that are difficult to impossible with a traditional responsive set up. But you have to take a slightly more involved action called a "bind" to make them come back. They are pretty much the standard for 1A, 3A (two-handed string tricks) and 5A (string tricks where the string isn't attached to your hand.)
4. In addition to plastic and wood, yoyos now come in a few different metals, including titanium. A perfectly good responsive plastic yoyo for doing tricks might cost you $10. A competition oriented titanium yoyo is $250 or more.
When my son told me they'd been yoyoing during free time in class, and he'd been borrowing friends' yoyos to learn on, we went to our local game and skill toy store to see what we could find for him. I also dug up some yoyos that I got about 15 years ago when my younger kids also decided they wanted to learn.
One thing led to another, and I ended up more hooked on throwing (as its known) than Sean did.
So here's the family portrait:
Starting top row, left to right:
This video is a few months old, but it's the most recent video I have of me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aqmZBum5tUc
So, anyone else here throw?
First off, yoyoing has changed dramatically i the last 20 years or so. It's been changing little by little ever since the first yoyos were made in the US, but there have been several really big changes since I was a kid.
1. Competitive yoyoing now has multiple divisions, and because of that several distinct classes of yoyos have arisen. Classic yoyo tricks are a blend of 1A (string tricks) and 2A (looping tricks), but there are even more divisions now. The yoyos are basically now 3 different types, and they don't much work for one another. String trick yoyos, looping yoyos, and offstring yoyos. I play mostly 1A - I like the intricacies.
2. Most modern yoyos now have ball bearings in them. It lets them spin longer, but also changes some of their other characteristics, like when and how they come back. This isn't really new, but it wasn't the default when I was a kid.
3. Not all yoyos come back because you give them a tug anymore. These are called "unresponsive" for obvious reasons. Wider string gaps and larger bearings make these yoyos spin longer and allow you to do some tricks that are difficult to impossible with a traditional responsive set up. But you have to take a slightly more involved action called a "bind" to make them come back. They are pretty much the standard for 1A, 3A (two-handed string tricks) and 5A (string tricks where the string isn't attached to your hand.)
4. In addition to plastic and wood, yoyos now come in a few different metals, including titanium. A perfectly good responsive plastic yoyo for doing tricks might cost you $10. A competition oriented titanium yoyo is $250 or more.
When my son told me they'd been yoyoing during free time in class, and he'd been borrowing friends' yoyos to learn on, we went to our local game and skill toy store to see what we could find for him. I also dug up some yoyos that I got about 15 years ago when my younger kids also decided they wanted to learn.
One thing led to another, and I ended up more hooked on throwing (as its known) than Sean did.
So here's the family portrait:
Starting top row, left to right:
- One Drop Benchmark O (unresponsive, aluminum)
- CLYW Gnarwhal 2 (unresponsive, aluminum)
- Yo Yo factory DV888 (responsive, aluminum)
- Yo Yo Jam Classic (comes responsive, modified to unresponsive)
- Yo Yo Factory Regen (unresponsive)
- One Drop Rally (unresponsive, plastic w/ metal weight rings)
- Magic Yoyo N12 (unresponsive, aluminum)
This video is a few months old, but it's the most recent video I have of me:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aqmZBum5tUc
So, anyone else here throw?