Skate and Annoy Galleries

Discussion

7 thoughts on “Ampul

  1. I remember these ads. I’m looking for some from 1976, they sold shirts that matched the board graphics. One of surfers and the other one had photos of skateboarders, they were buttoned photo shirts.

    1. I’ve got one from Skateboarder v2 #6, 1976. I’ll get that added after I get all the mag I’m working on now posted.

  2. interesting that there is a double kick advertised in that ad. obviously it didn’t catch on until the ’80s but still interesting to see that the idea was already there.

    1. Totally! I missed that when I posted this or I defiantly would have mentioned the early double kick!

  3. I bought a yellow double kick aluminum board from Skateboarder. I wanted the camber slalom board but settled on the double kick. It did lots of tricks, but I didn’t ride it very long. Sharp thin edges. It scratched, dented and destroyed everything. It literally chipped cement, slashed flesh, dented, scratched and punched holes in garage doors, and tore huynks out of wood ramps. Early parks banned metal boards.

    After I got badly cut in the ankle I took the trucks off and never road it again. Probably a big reason why they stopped making skateboards so quickly.

  4. God I wanted one of those aluminum boards so badly, and motocross cycle one, and the surfer one. I must have ordered something from them, because I just found an entry in my parents’ checkbook register from 1978. It wasn’t one of these cool boards, because I built my own from plywood, then ordered Gull Wings and Bones from one of the other mail order companies. Maybe it was the glue & grit system that I covered the top with.

  5. chris watts on June 5, 2025 - Reply

    I bought some stuff from this outfit. Found them in Skateboarder mag. Their decks had no printing at when I first went there- they were basically Bahne clones, and they had wheels that were Road Rider clones. Later, they made wheels that looked more like Kryptonics. They came in various durometer ratings and they were actually ok. I think they sold some trucks too- better than Chicagos but not as good as Trackers.

    The ‘store’ was basically a counter like you see at Grainger or McMaster Carr. You took a number and waited. I got the impression that the skateboard thing was a sideline, I remember seeing other fiberglass stuff on display.

    A lot of people were using AMPUL gear (mostly wheels), but no one really talked about it. After a few days the RR clones looked close enough to the real thing but now and then I’d see someone with Ampul wheels.

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