GTR1400MAN wrote:Horse wrote:And there are some motorcycles which don't have handlebars!
Like this one? Still on the road in 2015.
To "filter" through even narrower gaps?
GTR1400MAN wrote:Horse wrote:And there are some motorcycles which don't have handlebars!
Like this one? Still on the road in 2015.
angus wrote:To "filter" through even narrower gaps?
waremark wrote:So if it's about getting in and out, how do you explain the cars in which the wheel rises electronically when you switch off, which also have flat bottom wheels?
What examples can anyone think of in which it is difficult to get in and out because of the position of the wheel? (not including a Caterham without the removable wheel option).
waremark wrote:So if it's about getting in and out, how do you explain the cars in which the wheel rises electronically when you switch off, which also have flat bottom wheels?
What examples can anyone think of in which it is difficult to get in and out because of the position of the wheel? (not including a Caterham without the removable wheel option).
GeoffGrayer wrote:I steer my glider with a stick - left to go left, right to go right, back and forward to go up and down.
Has anyone thought of fitting a car with a stick? (back and forward obviously unnecessary, until we get these flying cars).
Pontoneer wrote:Never seen those before , but have seen recumbent bicycles where the handlebars are under the seat , and a friend has a couple of Messerschmitt microcars , one of which has a similar arrangement , and the other has a sort of aircraft style control column .
Fiction , of course , but so did KITT in ‘Knight Rider’ .
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