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Bikes and Trikes

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ConsumerSearch.com reviews the reviews of kids bikes, as well as hundreds of other products. The site identifies which products reviewers like and dislike, where they agree or disagree, and why.
http://www.consumersearch.com/www/sports_and_leisure/kids_bikes/
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http://www.consumersearch.com/www/sports_and_leisure/kids_bikes/

Epinions has the best comparison shopping information on Bicycle Outdoor Toys. Compare prices from across the web and read reviews from other consumers on Bicycle Outdoor Toys before you decide to buy.
http://www.epinions.com/kifm-Toys-All-Outdoor_Toys-Bicycle_Style
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http://www.epinions.com/kifm-Toys-All-Outdoor_Toys-Bicycle_Style

How to Buy a Children's Bike as a GiftThe training wheels are gone and your child is too big for that first bike - now what? Bikes make great gifts, and with a little footwork, you can find one to suit any aspiring cyclist.
http://www.ehow.com/ehow/ehow.jsp?id=12273

http://www.ehow.com/ehow/ehow.jsp?id=12273

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Wikipedia-Article "Trikes"

This article is about three-wheeled vehicles. For the periodical, see: Tricycle: The Buddhist Review
A Trice X2R back-to-back recumbent tricycle
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A Trice X2R back-to-back recumbent tricycle
Trike motorbike
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Trike motorbike
A tricycle used as a touring cycle rickshaw. (New York City, New York, USA)
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A tricycle used as a touring cycle rickshaw. (New York City, New York, USA)

A tricycle (often abbreviated to trike) is a three-wheeled vehicle.

Tricycles generally follow one of two layouts: delta, with two wheels at the back (of which one or both may be driven) and one steered wheel at the front; and tadpole with two steered wheels at the front and one (usually driven) wheel at the back. Not all trikes fall into one of these two classes - for example, some early pedal tricycles used two wheels in tandem on one side and a larger driving wheel on the other. It is common for tricycles to have front and rear wheels of different sizes.

Contents

History

The word tricycle has been in use since the early 19th Century and stems from the Greek tri (treia), meaning three, and kyklos, meaning a circle or wheel ([1]). The first recorded usage is apparently in 1828, signifying a "three-wheeled horse-drawn carriage." Tricycles have evolved to include various forms of propulsion including pedals, steam and internal combustion engines. The abbreviation trike has been in use since 1883.

The most common type of tricycle today is the child's toy pedal tricycle, but many more advanced forms exist and early tricycles were mostly for adults. Adult pedal tricycles are known to have existed from 1868.

Pedal tricycles

Small tricycles are often used by children who have not yet learned to balance a bicycle. Adult tricycles are much less common than bicycles. These may be upright or (increasingly) recumbent. Upright tricycles are often favoured by those with mobility problems. Recumbent tricycles are particularly suitable for long-distance use, including cycle touring and Audax riding. Upright trikes are usually deltas, although the Newton tadpole upright conversion is well regarded. Either type can be made low and large enough to be difficult to overturn on dry pavement, but usually the centre of gravity is high enough that tipping is possible, especially if the rider does not lean into the corners.

Adults may find upright tricycles difficult to ride due to familiarity with the counter-steering required to balance a bicycle. The variation in the camber of the road is the principal difficulty to be overcome once basic tricycle handling is mastered. Recumbent trikes are less affected by camber and, depending on the riding position, capable of very fast cornering. A few trikes are designed to tilt into the corners much as a bicycle does, and this also renders them more comfortable on cambered roads. They are discussed as tilting three wheelers, or TTW's for short.

In the case of delta tricycles, the drive is often to just one of the rear wheels, though in some cases both wheels are driven through a differential, A double freewheel, preferably using no-backlash roller clutches, is considered superior. Tadpoles are generally rear wheel drive.

Recumbent tadpole trikes often have brake one wheel with each hand, allowing the rider to brake one side. This has led to a geometry (misnamed centre point steering) with a kingpin axis intersecting the ground directly ahead of the tyre contact point, producing a normal amount of trail. This arrangement, elsewhere called "zero scrub radius" is used to mitigate the effects of one-sided braking on steering. It is said to allow the rider to steer by braking. Zero scrub is generally avoided on the grounds that it reduces steering feel and increases wandering. The alternative is to use standard Ackermann steering geometry, perhaps with both front brakes operated by the stronger hand. The KMX Kart stunt trike makes a feature of allowing the rear brake to be operated separately, allowing "handbrake turns".

In the UK, upright tricycles are sometimes referred to as "barrows". Many "trikies" in the UK belong to the Tricycle Association, formed in the 1929, and take part in its day rides, tours and time trials. Massed start racing of upright tricycles is limited to one or two criteria such as in Bungay, Suffolk each year.

Makers of upright trikes include George Longstaff, Higgins and Pashley in the UK. Makers of recumbent trikes include Hase (who make the largest-selling delta, the Kettwiesel, improbably named after the British children's programme Catweazle); Inspired Cycle Engineering, who make the Trice delta; AVD, who build the Burrows Windcheetah or Speedy; Australia's Greenspeed; and Stein, a recent entrant from Easter Europe.

Special purpose

Some tricycles (e.g. the Christiania and the Pashley load trike) are designed for load carrying, others are designed for racing or for comfort. Some recumbent tricycles are fully enclosed for all weather use - these are known as velomobiles.

The velotaxi, trishaw, or tricycle rickshaw, is increasingly common in Western cities.

Motorized tricycles

Motor tricycles, similar to motorcycles, are also a type of tricyle. They conform to the ethymological definition; "having three wheels." (however, sidecars are not considered tricycles, neither are the three wheeled automobiles such as the Morgans). Some of the earliest prototype automobiles were steam tricycles.

The wheels may be arranged either with one in front and two parallel behind (delta), or with two in front and one behind (tadpole). Occasionally, rear wheel steering is used, although this increases the turning circle and can affect handling (the geometry is similar to a regular trike operating in reverse, but with a steering damper added). Thrust SSC used a rear-steer tadpole layout.

Tadpoles are more stable under braking and more likely to slide instead of roll; a delta with the front brake on hard must go almost straight ahead to avoid tipping. The balance of friction patches and rolling resistance also means that tadpoles tend to understeer and deltas oversteer.

There is a significant motor tricycle subculture. Motor trikes are attractive for those with mobility or balance problems, for carrying multiple passengers on a motorcycle licence, or to avoid helmet use regulations. These machines are generally custom built and often finished to a very high standard. A common arrangement is to fit chopper-style ("ape hanger") front forks to a VW Beetle engine and transaxle, popular because it is largely self-contained on a single subframe.

Mas-manufactured motor tricycles include the Piaggio Ape (Bee) delivery trike, trikes used by municipal authorities in the USA, and, historically, vehicles such as the Scammell Scarab railway dray, a common sight around post-war British railway stations.

See also

This article is based on the article "Trikes" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.