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Hello PaulOld school will NOT be strong enough ... save yourself the aggro and heatbreak ... been there... tried it ... broke a collar bone.Get a nice very light and very strong new schooler for razzin in the woods ... and build yourself a nice old schooler for admiring at shows, crusing the streets, popping to the pub and going out on RAD rides with all the other lads on here Welcome in BTW
Nick Swan has a lovely NS race PK Ripper for sale.Pull the decals off and make it look old school if you like ... but once you have ridden something new ... you can't go back to old
Depends on a few factors..A lot depends on how much you'll punish the bike, a lot of us are quite a bit bigger and/or heavier than we used to beCombine that with stresses of jumping/landing & you can see where that will go If you're talking about general riding then OS can be fine (or better) for cruising about on - higher seat posts make for more relaxed pedaling and using a one piece crank can save money and a lot of fiddling about vs an old alloy 3 piece setup. Both Nick's PK & Rob's Floval would be good, strong, reliable bikes or you could pick up something cheap 2nd hand from eBay if you're patient & careful. eBay is a bit of a minefield simply because there are a lot of shady fookers on there who think they can cash in
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Paul, lots of great advice on here mate so please take your time. Two easy answers for you though - we are based all over the uk and if you look down the sections on the forum contents page you will find "members events" and "RadBMX official events" so there are rides and ramp nights from the south coast to York planned currently to get along to. Not much I the far north and Scotland but you don't know until you ask. Also there's the big Milton Keynes event in August which will blow your mind if you've never been and think that only a hand full of people would be daft enough to like this hobby...... have a browse through the photos section and see what I mean.Second easy answer is a modern bike only needs one brake and that usually stops you going over the handlebars so unless you're planning to be doing ends and rock-walks don't worry about one.That Ripper of Nick's is also very nice indeed btw - I forgot to add it on my list of ideal first buys. However you could go for a cheap newschool complete off the bay local to you and pick up a United, Wethepeople, Subrossa etc for peanus to get you riding again and then take your time looking and sourcing bits for an oldschool if you really need one. I'd buy one of the ones talked about on here and spend the rest on a decent secondhand IslaBike, Frog, Hoy or Early Rider for your daughter as soon as she's ready to be rid of the stabilisers tbh as then she will really want to go bike riding! (Assuming she hasn't already got one of course)
In terms of my daughter, funnily enough I looked up IslaBike's just before you suggested, wow they are a lot of cash!
They look the nuts!