They are new. Tell ya the height when we get 'em next week.Originally Posted by Wolf
They are new. Tell ya the height when we get 'em next week.Originally Posted by Wolf
Vote David Bain for MNZ president
Cheers!Originally Posted by White trash
..........
Motorbike Camping for the win!
Wolf--no way do I wanna talk trashy outa a sale --but my experience--3 is too young for 2 wheels.
Its not so much the bike itself --more that when things turn pear shaped theres fuck all ya can do about it.
My strong suggestion to ya is a quad to start with--and one with a teather that can run back to you --
If ya dead set on a two wheeler then at least run a terather/kill switch back off the back of the bike and again run it back to you
Dont wanna sound like a kill joy folks
To see a life newly created.To watch it grow and prosper. Isn't that the greatest gift a human being can be given?
that looks an absolute blast! How well would it propel a 65kg bugger like myself? Wheelies all the way?Originally Posted by White trash
Probably lacks the torque for wheelies to be honest. I mean, it'll do 'em but keeping it up will be very difficult and that's the last thing a young fellah needs.
Vote David Bain for MNZ president
Frosty has a (small) point Wolf, although I do know of a number of 3 year olds riding two wheeled motorbikes now.
That being the case, wrap ya laughing gear 'round one of these.
Product Description
Product size: 980mm×600mm×5870mm
Seat height: 460mm
Engine: 49cc,2 stroke,single cylinder, air cooling;
Starting kist start
Max power 1.8Kw / 7500r/min
MaxTorque(N.m./r/min): 3.5n.m/6000r/min
Compressed Ratio 8.50:1
Tank: 1.0L
Drive system: chain
Transmission automatic clutch
Wheel size: 3.0-4
Wheel base: 690mm
Ground clearance: 50mm
Brake(Front/Rear): disc brake®
Max. speed: 50km/h
Max. load: 95kg
Range: 50km
G.W./N.W.(kg): 33kg/29kg
Vote David Bain for MNZ president
Well made points, FROSTY.Originally Posted by FROSTY
The three year old is already very confident on 2 wheels (push bike) and leans around corners, goes reasonably fast on it - faster than my usual brisk walk.
I was thinking in terms of limiting the motorbike's speed back to my walking pace so I could keep alongside him. the tether with kill switch sounds a great idea.
Motorbike Camping for the win!
We were watching (for the 10,000th time) "Quest for Victory" a doco about ELF's involvement in motorcycle sport and the three-yera-old is mostly enamored of MX and trials riding - the MX, Paris-Dakar and Trials segments of the doco he really gets into, more so than the Moto GP. Asked if he wants to ride GP or Trials and he said "Trials". No great surprise there, he keeps trying to ride his bike up onto things or make it jump. On his little velocipede he actually gets up to speed and then jumps into the air, taking the bike with him (good thing it's pretty solid or he'd've broken it by now).
Looks like he'll be wanting an off-road style bike rather than a sprots boik configuration.
The two-year-old has to learn how to ride a pushbike yet.
Motorbike Camping for the win!
I've found an example of what looks like Whitetrash's trail minibike on Trademe. http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/List...160&key=382525
The main point is the photo gives an idea of scale for a child. Cute machine. Mind you I like Trash's 4 wheeler too.
Interestingly, there is another guy trying to sell one for $400, claiming it is an unwanted $500 gift.
Cheers for that.Originally Posted by Winston001
Yep, the kid is 110cm tall and my 3-year-old is nearly that tall.
He's now learned that he can ride a bike even if he can't touch the ground, so even if I have to lift him onto it and lift him off it, he should be able to ride it.
We took him down to the Hamilton BMX Club's track near Minogue Park on the weekend. Sent him around the track with me running along beside him to be sure he was all right.
First he went around on his usual (12") bike but it doesn't free-wheel so the pedals would take off on him as he plunged downhill. He couldn't get his feet back on the pedals as he slowed on the hills so he kept falling off. We dug out the other bike his aunt had given him (14", I think), which can free-wheel, and I lifted him onto it and let him ride around the track while I ran alongside (or, staggered, huffed, puffed and wheezed along behind if you prefer accuracy).
Must have looked quite interesting, a three-year-old careering around the track with a 42-year-old puffing along behind him hollering "keep pedalling, keep pedalling!"
He fell off a fair few times - mostly because he didn't pedal fast enough to make it up a couple of the hills - but kept getting back on and kept wanting to go around again immediately afterwards.
His control of the bike is brilliant, the only time he fell off from poor steering was when he turned his head to watch some of the other kids. The rest of the time it was not having enough speed to get up the hill or accidentally pedalling backwards (and engaging the rear brake).
He's been around the track about 8 times now on the larger bike (every time he fell off I had to lift him back onto the seat and I had to grab the bike when he finished so he could get off) and the last time around he only fell off three times - on the three steepest hills - and two of those times he almost made it over the crest. He toppled over from a standstill rather than "fell off" on those occasions.
Given that he has the control sorted out over a full-on BMX track at the speeds you can attain going down those hills (I was sprinting in places), I'm confident that he can cope with a mini-bike governed back to walking pace (until such time as he demonstrates proper control of the throttle and use of the brakes) on flat terrain. I'll still use the tether with a kill switch idea, I think.
Later I'll allow the mini-bike up to the speed he attains on the BMX track but keep him on the flat until he demonstrates appropriate control (running around after a mini-bike on the flat has got to be easier than chasing a pushbike over the BMX course!).
By the time I let him onto a tame MX track with the minibike, he should be fully confident on his pushbike on the BMX track and completing the course on a regular basis.
Won't be letting the minibike go at full speed for quite some time, though.
Edit: The bit that really scares me is that I will have to go through all this running around after the bikes with him and with our two-year-old in his turn and, later, our daughter... I'm in grave danger of becoming fit!
Motorbike Camping for the win!
Is the $290 inclusive or exclusive of Grab, Snatch and Take? (or Government Swindle Tax)Originally Posted by White trash
Are they in yet?
Motorbike Camping for the win!
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