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2026 Bearings: Bones, Bronson, Spitfire. The Real Guide.

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2026 Bearings: Bones, Bronson, Spitfire. The Real Guide.

Your wheels are dragging. You're pushing twice as hard as your homie for the same damn speed. The problem isn't your legs. It's your…

Par Guillaume Martin · 9 mai 2026 · 4 min de lecture

Your wheels are dragging. You're pushing twice as hard as your homie for the same damn speed. The problem isn't your legs. It's your…

Guillaume Martin

Rédacteur en chef · 18 ans de skate

A vu naitre et mourir 3 generations de pros. Chronique mensuelle.

Pour aller plus loin : Tampa Pro

⏱ Reading: 5 min

Your wheels are spinning slow. You’re pushing twice as hard as your buddy for the same speed. The problem isn’t your legs. It’s your bearings. And if you pick the wrong ones, you’re literally throwing your money on the asphalt.

Bones Reds and Bronson G3 skateboard bearings on concrete

Understand Bearings in 2 Minutes

All skateboarding bearings follow the 608 standard: 8 mm internal diameter, 22 mm external, 7 mm thickness. This means one simple thing: any bearing fits any wheel. No compatibility to check. The real choice is quality.

You’ve seen ABEC 7 or ABEC 9 on boxes. Forget it. This industrial standard measures manufacturing precision, not real skateboarding speed. Bones doesn’t even ABEC certify its bearings. They use their own standard, Skate Rated, which considers impacts, dust, and side loads. Exactly what a skateboarding bearing deals with daily.

Two types of protection exist. Metal shields (ZZ) resist dust better. Rubber seals (RS) offer better waterproofing for rainy sessions or dirty terrain. Most street bearings use a mix: one metal side, one open side for easier cleaning.

The Comparison: Bones Reds vs Bronson G3 vs Bones Swiss

Three bearings, three budgets, three philosophies. We’ve dug through community feedback, field tests, and technical specs to give you a straight-up opinion. If you’re building a complete setup from scratch, bearings are the last place to save money.

Nosk8.com Recommendation

Bones Reds

The absolute benchmark. The best-selling bearing worldwide for over 20 years. Steel balls, high-speed nylon cage, pre-lubricated with Speed Cream. They roll fast, they take a beating, they clean easily. The choice of 80% of street skaters.

Between 20 and 28 euros for a set of 8

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The Bones Reds are the default choice, and it’s no accident. They’re not the fastest, nor the most durable. But the performance-to-price ratio is unbeatable. When you blow out a set after 6 months of intense sessions, you buy another without crying. That’s exactly what you expect from a consumable.

Nosk8.com Recommendation

Bronson G3

The serious challenger. Deep Groove raceways, Micro Groove surfaces to minimize friction, Max Impact cage. Bronson designed these bearings specifically for skateboarding, not industry. Faster acceleration than Reds, 2 to 4 months longer lifespan according to field reports.

Between 30 and 38 euros for a set of 8

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The Bronson G3s hit the market more recently but quickly conquered skateparks. The difference is mainly felt long-term: where Reds start slowing down after 3 months, G3s maintain their speed longer thanks to their advanced lubrication system.

What About Bones Swiss?

The Bones Swiss are the Holy Grail. Made in Switzerland, surgical precision, exceptional lifespan. But at 55-70 euros a set, it’s an investment. If you ride 5 days a week and want the best roll possible, Swiss are justified. For the average skater who rides 2-3 times a week, Reds or G3s get the job done.

A trap to avoid: ceramic bearings. At over 100 euros, they’re fragile to impacts and offer no real advantage in street skateboarding. It’s marketing, not performance. Save that money for a good pair of skateboarding shoes.

ModelPriceLifespanFor Whom
Bones Reds20-28 €3-6 monthsEveryone
Bronson G330-38 €5-8 monthsRegular Sessions
Bones Swiss55-70 €8-12 monthsDaily Riders

Maintain Your Bearings Like a Pro

A well-maintained 25-euro bearing outperforms a neglected 60-euro bearing. That’s not an opinion, it’s mechanics. Maintenance makes all the difference between wheels that sing and wheels that squeak.

Skateboard bearing disassembled for cleaning with solvent

Cleaning in 5 Steps

1. Remove the bearings from your wheels with a skate tool or your truck as a lever. 2. Remove the shields with a needle or a thin utility knife. 3. Submerge all 8 bearings in a jar of solvent (acetone or isopropyl alcohol). Let them soak for 10 minutes. 4. Scrub each bearing with an old toothbrush, shake the jar. 5. Dry completely, apply 1 to 2 drops of Bones Speed Cream into each bearing, spin to distribute the lubricant.

Skateboard bearing maintenance kit with solvent and lubricant

Never use WD-40. It dries in a few hours and leaves your balls exposed. Only use a specific bearing lubricant. Bones Speed Cream or Bronson lubricant get the job done. Frequency: every 3-4 weeks if you ride regularly. More often if you skate in the rain or on dirty terrain.

The Nosk8 Verdict

If you’re starting out or looking for the best value, grab Bones Reds without thinking twice. It’s the safe bet. If you ride often and want to invest 10 more euros for a real difference in longevity, Bronson G3s are worth checking out. Swiss? Save those for the day you know exactly why you need them.

And most importantly, clean your bearings. It’s the only free upgrade in skateboarding. Combine that with a good setup of trucks suited to your style, and you’ll roll like you dropped double the budget.




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