Looks like a speed bump waiting to happenI mean is it a "bike" or classified as a "cage"?
I'm starting to see more and more of them used as commuters and weekend errand runners in the Sacramento area.
More power to them. The more folks we can get on the road in "other-than-cages" the better it will be for all of us who ride motorcycles.
In the Good-old-bye-God-Yew-Ess-of-AYE we tend to look down on the scooter riders as some sort of sub-class. I think that Europe and the rest of the world probably view things differently. Because of the tiered licensing requirements, the "scooter",and the machines of that type, born from those factories, are more popular. At least that's my opinion based on the pictures I've see of the local towns and metro parking areas that are replete with scooters.
IMO we need a change of attitude, on this continent, that appreciates the co-ed riding a scooter to college, the mother or grand-mother who uses one to run errands, the commuter dad or whatever should be accepted as 2-wheeled brethren in the war for space and respect from the average car driver. The more divergent family members on "our" type of machines the more acknowledgment and recognition we might all gain from the cagers we share the roads with.
YMMV (and your opinion).
ODOT?...and can anyone tell me who that is on the trike? (big celebrity)
Michael Jackson?...and can anyone tell me who that is on the trike? (big celebrity)
:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:In polite circles, those guys are called "homosexuals."
I wonder what it'd be like with a car tire on the back?
Can a motorcycle have 4 wheels?Yamaha is set to reveal a whole new class of four-wheel recreational machine at the Tokyo Motor Show that looks to combine motorcycle performance and maneuverability with four wheels worth of traction and road-holding capability. Details remain sketchy on the Tesseract hybrid four-wheeled motorcycle – ostensibly a four-wheel version of the Vespa, Piaggio and Vectrix three-wheelers with tilting mechanisms (dubbed “dual-scythe suspension”) at both ends making it a carving four-wheeler that retains the advantages of narrow width roughly equivalent to a two-wheeled machine. Powered by an electric hybrid liquid-cooled V-twin, the Tesseract promises ample torque and a top speed that will be theoretical everywhere but a racetrack, and when at rest, the machine will remain upright without the need for a stand via a dual arm-lock system.
Visit Transport2.0 to read the full story and see more images of this extraordinary machine.
Transport2.0
Well SURE! We've all seen that a car can have 2 wheels.Can a motorcycle have 4 wheels?
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