Kevin Skazalski
July 21st 03, 05:37 AM
This may not be at all what you are considering but it sure was
fun.... Check out the quadricycle at http://www.crank-it.com/
Go to "photo gallery" and to "features"
I had the pleasure of riding one this past May at the Michigan
recumbent Rally - East (see http://www.lmb.org/wolbents/ and scroll
down).
I just purchased my first recumbent, a Bacchetta Giro less than a week
ago, but had a lot of fun trying out both the Crank-it Quad and the
Wiz Wheelz Terra Trike 3.4. (Never considered anything but a two
wheeler until I saw these in person). If I had unlimited $$$ I think
one of them would be a second recumbent for me.
Regards,
skitz
Beware of strangers bearing used soda straws.
On Fri, 6 Jun 2003 06:46:36 -0700 (PDT),
(Steve McDonald) wrote:
>
> If you want a truly all-terrain recumbent, look at the hand-cycle a
>paraplegic rider used to scale the summit of Mt. Denali. It had
>caterpillar tracks for rear wheels and a granny gear lower than anything
>you've even seen.
>
>Steve McDonald
fun.... Check out the quadricycle at http://www.crank-it.com/
Go to "photo gallery" and to "features"
I had the pleasure of riding one this past May at the Michigan
recumbent Rally - East (see http://www.lmb.org/wolbents/ and scroll
down).
I just purchased my first recumbent, a Bacchetta Giro less than a week
ago, but had a lot of fun trying out both the Crank-it Quad and the
Wiz Wheelz Terra Trike 3.4. (Never considered anything but a two
wheeler until I saw these in person). If I had unlimited $$$ I think
one of them would be a second recumbent for me.
Regards,
skitz
Beware of strangers bearing used soda straws.
On Fri, 6 Jun 2003 06:46:36 -0700 (PDT),
(Steve McDonald) wrote:
>
> If you want a truly all-terrain recumbent, look at the hand-cycle a
>paraplegic rider used to scale the summit of Mt. Denali. It had
>caterpillar tracks for rear wheels and a granny gear lower than anything
>you've even seen.
>
>Steve McDonald