Lanyard control for freestyle?

Midlake Crisis

Site Supporter
Location
Bakersfield, CA
For flatwater maneuvers like fountains and hood tricks where do you all hook your lanyard; wrist? vest? kill idle and no lanyard?
I would prefer to keep using it but it is frustrating when it gets in the way or gets yanked unintentionally sometimes.
 
If you don't wanna ditch it, then keep it on your wrist and when you are ready to do a fountain or hood trick you can pull the cord under the chinpad so it's on the right side of the handlebars. This works on a RN. I don't know about a SN.
 

Midlake Crisis

Site Supporter
Location
Bakersfield, CA
To each his own, but I just don't like the low idle thing. There are a lot of times when I am switching positions and have to intentionally let go of the throttle, etc. that I just don't want the motor to die.

I may try the wrist thing again, but unless there is some new idea I think I am sticking with it clipped to the vest and just work on getting better at being aware of it and managing it.
 

ANT

Just ride
I'll tell you guys something, it was freakin nice to have my lanyard (which i had attached to my vest) a few weeks ago when the return spring on my carb broke. and it wasnt old, maybe installed it a year ago or so with my new throttle wheel
 

tbaer

USMC
Location
BEAUFORT SC
I was wondering this same thing, a few weeks ago when hur.bill was here I kept knocking my lanyard off on landing and my ski would die. one time it threw me over the bars.
 

djkorn1

kidkornfilms
Site Supporter
Location
Cleveland Ohio
I still like the lanyard...I just turn it so that I don't bump it and I use a really long cord. I have tried running without them

...low idle (kept stalling, sucked!)
...kept idle normal (had my ski head to canada a few times, luckily riding partners caught it).
 

snowxr

V watch your daughters V
Location
Waterford, MI
I used to ride without a tether, untill I fell off and my ski wedged under a dock narrowly missing a neighbors new boat.
 

Jawbreaker

Rick James Edition
Location
Music City, TN
To each his own, but I just don't like the low idle thing. There are a lot of times when I am switching positions and have to intentionally let go of the throttle, etc. that I just don't want the motor to die.

I may try the wrist thing again, but unless there is some new idea I think I am sticking with it clipped to the vest and just work on getting better at being aware of it and managing it.

I use a zip tie and have my idle set at a kinda sweet spot... It runs for a few seconds and then quits running.

I turn my idle up a little more when I compete.
 
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