30 April 2012

Almost A Motorcycle

Trikes.
THREE WHEELS.
Some, like the one in the pic, have two wheels in front, one in back.
Others, like the ONLY trike I've ever ridden, have one 'way out front and two in the rear.
That machine belonged to one of my former students. He drove up for a lesson with it and I was immediately knocked out...
It was a BIG V-8 with an automatic tranny... had obviously been a front-wheel drive system before becoming a trike.
"Guess what it is and I'll let you drive it", he said. The valve covers told me nothin'...
"Well, it's either a Cadillac Eldorado or an Oldsmobile Toronado engine, but I can't tell which."
"Close enough" he says. "It's a 455 Olds."
Four-Hundred Fifty-Five cubic inches powering a machine that probably weighed less than 1500 pounds! He gave me the keys, then jumped on my Yamaha XS1100 to give chase. That trike was so powerful, to change lanes on the Interstate all you had to do was twist the throttle hard...
The front tire would leave the pavement and torque would move the bike one lane to the right, (controllably!)

It was a neat thing... everyone on the road pointed and waved.
It got 15 m.p.g., and since the seat back was attached to the radiator it wasn't comfortable to ride it long distances, even if you COULD afford the gas bill.


The trike in the photo above is a "Can-Am Spyder".
It's a neat concept. There's a dealer about 30 minutes away from us doing a pretty decent job of sellin' 'em.

It's obviously NOT a motorcycle.
I have a question I'd really like answered-
They get about 23 miles per gallon of fuel and take up almost as much room as a car...
Other than the fact that it's different, or unless you have some disability preventing you from riding two-wheels, why would anyone buy one?
Why not just buy a motorcycle with a sidecar rig?

On the other hand, if someone comes out with something like this I'll REALLY be interested!

7 comments:

On a Wing and a Whim said...

Calmer Half wistfully mentions the bikes he rode all over South Africa when he was younger, fitter, and not bearing nearly as many scars. I think he likes the Can-Am because it looks shiny and nifty, though his justification is that he's had a few too many knocks to take putting a bike down.

On the other hand, he does get an awfully enthusiastic gleam in his eyes when mentioning Urals and their sidecars. I think I know which one of us is "supposed" to ride in the sidecar, and which one drives.

For people without broken backs... Well, one of my old housemates likes 'em because they look cool, but mainly "just because." Which, for a red-blooded American male, is damn fine reason right there.

Greybeard said...

Wing-
I too like the look, and I'm glad others are buying them.
And about the Ural...
Make sure he rides one before he buys. Even with the late "modernizations" they're still pretty much a sledgehammer.
And with a recommended cruise speed of 62 mph, longer jaunts would take a while.

Ed Bonderenka said...

I don't know.
Can-Ams look like they're marketed to people afraid to ride bikes but want the cache.

The ads make me laugh, even if they were worth riding.
The "biker" coming out to nod approvingly really cracks me up.

Ed Bonderenka said...

I hope you realize I'm commenting on the ads, not the bike.
A bike's a bike, or a car with three wheels and open-top, or something.
I still don't get ape-hangers, but someone likes 'em.

Old NFO said...

Interesting ones... And the Can Am is a strange one...

Well Seasoned Fool said...

I don't see the point. Buy a Miata and drive with the top down.

Greybeard said...

WSF-
You 'n me, pal.
The Miata would get better gas mileage, probably take up less space, and could be used in weather you'd never consider driving the Spyder in.
(And I'm thinking the price wouldn't be a lot different either!)