Carvology - Geometry
Tight Turns: The New Geometry With traditional skateboard trucks (based on 1930s roller-skate technology), the geometry you see is NOT the geometry you get. The pivot arm doesn’t rotate precisely in the plastic pivot cup, because the king pin and the grommets don’t support a stable pivot axis. Instead, the pivot arm rocks against the sides of the pivot cup at a shallow, unstable angle, making tight turns difficult or impossible. (This angle, called the “action angle,” is roughly marked by an imaginary line connecting the pivot arm and the center of the grommet collar.) Many truck manufacturers try to solve this problem by setting the pivot arm in the pivot cup at a very steep incline. This quickens turning response, but it interferes with grommet performance, making steering control go from bad to worse. The Seismic pivot pin, on the other hand, is solidly fixed in the baseplate at a perfect angle (either 30° or 45°). It’s machined from the highest-quality steel, then burnished and galvanized. The hangers rotate on this rock-steady axis with total precision, so Seismic turning response is absolutely consistent and predictable — quick at lower speeds, yet safe and stable at higher speeds. And because of this steel-solid geometry, angled riser pads have a more radical effect than on the old roller skate model — they can make your Seismic trucks turn more slowly or far tighter than anything else available! |
Why the Old Geometry Doesn’t Add UpFine control is impossible without a consistent steering geometry. But with the old roller-skate design, there’s no way that plastic grommets can align a steady geometry and form an adjustable suspension system at the same time.Whenever you loosen or tighten the grommets (or whenever the kingpin nut rotates on its own due to road vibration or a worn-out lock insert), the action angle changes. Grommets shrink and weaken over time, so the action angle gradually degrades even if the kingpin nut stays fixed in one place. Result: you have to constantly re-adjust to an ever-changing steering geometry.Further, turning forces, body twisting, and deck weighting can flex the grommets and the pivot cup in all directions, thus throwing the hangers out of proper alignment, even when the deck isn’t tilted. This means uncontrolled (and potentially dangerous) turning responses.In contrast, the Seismic steering geometry is exactly aligned by a precision-ground steel pivot pin fixed in the baseplate. (Although it’s perfectly integrated with the rock-solid geometry, the Seismic spring system isn’t needed to align or stabilize the pivot axis.) Deck tilt alone determines how much the axles swivel, and a given angle of deck tilt always produces the same amount of axle movement, regardless of spring tension or side loads. |







