I tried it. The wheels aren't on the same plane. The Grit fork it slightly elevated. To make matters worse, the fork accommodates 100 and 110mm so there is area between the axles that the wheel rolls back and forth on with the razor pro block and headset. Go with a custom. I did District. You have the bicycle grease the $#@$ out of it. I wish I knew a way to space my wheel without it losing that drag.
I tried it. It works but you need a custom headset if your using a pro deck. District works. I'm also running introverted so if you get the threaded you can thread it up the handlebars of the razor. The problem is the space the 110/100mm gap on the axle because it accommodates both wheel types. It causes drag. The front wheel is also elevated 10 mm.
yes but it will brake esaly
yes you can
yes / only the 100mm
Although it says razor compatible it should still fit grit because they are the same width
yea but u will have to find out how meny Spencer's
Hi, you u can the forks from bayside blades and u can buy the deck from Skaterhq, both Aussie website, not sure where u can buy the whole scooter. sorry
Definatly go for a razor ultra pro if you dont mind having problems but its a good scooter for its price what you could get is a grit elite 2 same price as razor pro but alot stronger and more reliable.
The newest Grit Elite scooters weigh an extremely low 3.2 kilograms. Lighter than the 5.0 MGP Nitro and 3.7 Razor Ultra Pro.
grit mayhems arent very good for beginners as there are very good scooters. A better scooter for beginners is a razor ultra pro or an mgp base model Hope it helped (:
Yes but you need a spacer to put in between the bars and the headset because the mad gear head tube is smaller than the average headtube.
A grit scooter is better (I would recommend the extremist or the elite 2)