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  3. Pro Setup Era

2012–2018

2012–2018

Pro Setup Era

The Pro-Setup Era: Precision Hardware Becomes the Standard

CNC precision & spec culture

Clean-desk setup photos, exploded part flat-lays, spec talk, and early drop announcements.

Kingpin Editorial·2026-06-27·7 min read·Through the Years: Era by Era

CNC machining brought consistent trucks and wheels, urethane replaced plastic for serious riders, and deck widths crept upward toward modern proportions.

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  • Why it trended
  • Who popularized it
  • The gear that defined it
  • Community moments
  • Reading this era's setups today

If the previous era made wooden setups normal, this one made them precise. CNC machining brought consistency to trucks and wheels, urethane became the expected material for serious riders, and deck widths started creeping upward toward modern skate proportions. The 'pro setup' — a specific, considered combination of parts — became the thing riders aspired to.

Part of a series

This is one era in Fingerboard Setup Trends Through the Years. Each page covers the spirit of a single era — the gear that defined it, why it trended, and how to read setups from that period today.

Chapter 01 · The spark

Why it trended

Precision was the appeal. CNC lathing improved wheel roundness and bearing fit, and a wider range of deck widths and concaves let riders tune feel to preference. As Instagram became a channel for brand drops and rider clips, a well-chosen pro setup became both a performance choice and something to show — which pulled the whole community toward higher-spec gear.

Chapter 02 · The makers

Who popularized it

Established brands deepened their lines — Blackriver trucks, Berlinwood decks across multiple widths, FlatFace and Oak urethane wheels — while new names broadened the market: Teak Tuning (founded 2014, Rochester NY) served the growing beginner-to-intermediate tier, and Dynamic Fingerboards (founded 2016, Southern California) focused on realism-driven trucks. Founding details here mix official brand pages with retailer cross-references and are noted accordingly.

Brands and makers of the era

  • Blackriver (1999) — Continued scene infrastructure; BRT trucks widely used in pro setups; multiple truck generations and widths.1
  • Berlinwood (2002) — Deck brand popular for pro setups; width range including 29mm, 32mm, 33.3mm offered riders shape and size choice.2
  • FlatFace Fingerboards (2003) — US brand popular for urethane bearing wheels (G5, G6, G7 generations) and collaborations.3
  • Oak Wheels (2007) — Urethane wheel brand popular in pro setups; hand-made in Porto, Portugal.4
  • Teak Tuning (2014) — Broad mid-range brand; founded 2014 in Rochester, NY; affordable tuning, completes, decks, ramps, accessories.5
  • Dynamic Fingerboards (2016) — Southern California brand; founded 2016; known for realism-focused trucks and single/dual-bearing editions.6
Teak Tuning imagery supports the beginner-to-intermediate access story of the pro-setup period.

Chapter 03 · The gear

The gear that defined it

5-ply maple decks with defined concave options (low, medium) and multiple widths became the norm. CNC machining and improved mold-pressing raised deck consistency. Popsicle shapes were dominant but old-school and specialty shapes were available. Graphics shifted toward split-ply (real-wood veneers) as a premium finish.

  • Deck sizes: 29mm and 32mm were both popular; 34mm and 36mm began appearing as boutique options. Community sources note that 32mm 'had been popular for many years' and 34mm was beginning to attract interest by the end of this era.
  • Trucks & wheels: BRT trucks (Blackriver), Winkler Wheels, FlatFace G-series bearing wheels, and Oak Wheels were popular in pro setups. CNC lathing improved wheel roundness and bearing consistency. Urethane replaced plastic as the expected material for serious riders.
Blackriver Trucks (BRTs) — the purpose-built pro trucks (launched 2010) that anchored precision setups through this era. Blackriver shop
Dynamic truck imagery belongs with the precision-hardware chapter of the pro-setup era.

Chapter 04 · The scene

Community moments

Instagram became a key channel for brand drops and rider clips, layered on top of continuing forum-based trading. There was still no widely-established dedicated marketplace platform — buyers and sellers used Instagram DMs, Facebook groups, and forum threads to move gear secondhand.

Instagram became a key channel for brand drops and rider clips. Forum-based secondary trading continued. No dedicated fingerboard marketplace platform was widely established; buyers and sellers used Instagram DMs, Facebook groups, and forum threads.7

Chapter 05 · Today

Reading this era's setups today

This is the era where specs really start to matter for listings. 29mm and 32mm were both common while 34mm and 36mm began appearing as boutique options, and urethane-vs-plastic plus CNC bearing fit became real differentiators. Stating width, concave, wheel material, and truck brand helps buyers compare like-for-like — and the exact year any width 'took over' is not precisely documented, so avoid presenting trend tipping-points as hard facts.

Dual-bearing truck imagery gives the era's spec language something concrete to look at.

Still being verified

  • Winkler Wheels (Germany, by Martin Winkler) is documented by retailer and interview sources as making bearing wheels since around 2002; a standalone official Winkler page was not reviewed.
  • The 32mm-to-34mm shift is described in retailer blogs (Teak Tuning, Caramel) without sales data, so the precise tipping-point year is not documented.

References

Numbered references to the brand, retailer, and community pages that back this article. The label notes how firmly each source is established.

  1. 1.About Blackriver— BlackriverOfficial↩

    Official Blackriver about page; confirms founded 1999 by Martin Ehrenberger in Germany. Milestones include Fast Fingers 1 (2000), Blackriver Trucks launched 2010, Berlin shop opened 2010.

  2. 2.Berlinwood Pro Fingerboards | Blackriver Shop— BlackriverOfficial↩

    Confirms Berlinwood founded 2002 by Timo Lieben in Berlin; handmade in Germany; deck widths 29mm, 32mm, 33.3mm, 36mm; 5-ply construction; popsicle shape.

  3. 3.About FlatFace Fingerboards— FlatFace FingerboardsOfficial↩

    Founded 2003 by Mike Schneider; started with grip tape; moved into decks then bearing wheels; first US distributor of Blackriver-Ramps domestically.

  4. 4.Oak Wheels— Oak WheelsOfficial↩

    Concept started 2007; V1 urethane wheels launched 2009; made in Porto, Portugal by Ricardo Lopes; FlatFace began distributing Oak in 2010.

  5. 5.About Teak Tuning— Teak TuningOfficial↩

    Official Teak Tuning about page; states the brand was created in 2014 and is based in Rochester, NY.

  6. 6.Dynamic Fingerboards About Us— Dynamic FingerboardsOfficial↩

    Official Dynamic Fingerboards about page; documents the brand's Southern California origin and 2016 launch.

  7. 7.The FlatFace Museum— FlatFace FingerboardsCommunity↩

    FlatFace's community-curated museum of historic fingerboard decks, wheels, and ephemera — a useful period reference for the boutique and pro eras. Imagery is FlatFace's; link and credit the museum rather than reproducing its photos.

  8. 8.What's the Difference Between 32mm and 34mm?— Teak TuningRetailer

    Notes that Tech Deck started at 26mm; early 2000s makers worked around that width; 29mm was long the standard; 32mm became common; 34mm now the most popular for pro use.

  9. 9.Fingerboard Sizes Explained: 32mm vs 34mm vs 36mm— Caramel FingerboardsRetailer

    Overview of common widths (29mm, 32mm, 34mm, 36mm) and their positioning; confirms width trend toward wider over time.

  10. 10.Best Fingerboard Brands in 2026 (Pro & Beginner Picks)— Caramel FingerboardsRetailer

    Current brand overview covering Blackriver, Berlinwood, FlatFace, Caramel, Teak Tuning, and Skull FB; useful for 2018-present era context.

Was this article helpful?

About this article

This article is educational and reflects general, sourced community and retailer knowledge about fingerboard gear. It is not a grading, valuation, rarity, or authenticity service, and Kingpin does not guarantee the value, rarity, or authenticity of any item based on this content. Always review the actual listing photos, specs, and seller details before buying.

If something in a listing looks off, report it and choose the category that fits.

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On this page

  • Why it trended
  • Who popularized it
  • The gear that defined it
  • Community moments
  • Reading this era's setups today

← Previous

The Community-Growth Era: YouTube, Bearing Wheels, and a Global Scene

Next →

The Modern Boutique Era: Drops, Premium Wood, and Resale Culture

Keep reading

2018–Present · Modern Boutique

The Modern Boutique Era: Drops, Premium Wood, and Resale Culture

Fingerboarding matured into a premium, drop-driven boutique culture with some streetwear-like patterns — limited batches, web drops, and active secondary resale.

2006–2012 · Community Growth

The Community-Growth Era: YouTube, Bearing Wheels, and a Global Scene

Video sharing took fingerboarding global, bearing wheels and dedicated trucks raised the hardware bar, and wooden decks became the standard for serious riders.

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