This is built using the back half of a Rad mini folding bike. I took it apart at the hinge, made an adapter plate for a center aluminum beam, and built additional framing to support the aluminum and fiberglass body work. The front end uses ATV ball joints to get proper scrub radius with the kids dirt bike wire wheels. The front brakes are hydraulic disk as used on kids ATVs. The front grill shell is fiberglass, the mold made from a piece of kids “saucer sled”, two pieces of wooden porch step railing, and pieces of aluminum trailer skin sheeting, After forming a mold over those bits, I am able to make grill shells.
The “Morgan beetle-tail” piece is made from a mold I took from the right side of the nose of a B-52 Stratofortress “droptank”. There were plenty of those from the Vietnam war… a friend has one hanging in his barn…he loaned me apiece of it. The Morgan style louver in the lower tail were made with a small bead-roller kit that clamps in my bench vice.
The front wheel track is deliberately too narrow to allow my trike to fit between the posts on local bike path entrances. I have already rolled it over, getting too aggressive on a u-turn. Fortunately my front fenders were strong enough to survive! Those front fenders were made from a mold I pulled from a plug…..that plug uses part of the rear fender of a 1971 Suzuki 90cc trail bike, with addition aluminum grafted on to get that 1930s style.
The chain extension required making rollers carried on dual motorcycle sealed front wheel bearings, a lot of chain and a smaller front sprocket.
This has been a very reliable around town bike and hauls “stuff” in the saddle bags inside the rear body. Downhill I have seen 28 mph and it feels a little spooky but doesn’t get twitchy. Most comfortable cruise is about 15 mph using medium pedal assist to save battery range…but it is not near as efficient as a bicycle. Despite all the aluminum and fiberglass (lay up with all epoxy NOT polyesterene resin) it weighs 120 pounds.
The little old ladies walking the local path all say, “I want one of those!” They like the old fashioned style.
The “Morgan beetle-tail” piece is made from a mold I took from the right side of the nose of a B-52 Stratofortress “droptank”. There were plenty of those from the Vietnam war… a friend has one hanging in his barn…he loaned me apiece of it. The Morgan style louver in the lower tail were made with a small bead-roller kit that clamps in my bench vice.
The front wheel track is deliberately too narrow to allow my trike to fit between the posts on local bike path entrances. I have already rolled it over, getting too aggressive on a u-turn. Fortunately my front fenders were strong enough to survive! Those front fenders were made from a mold I pulled from a plug…..that plug uses part of the rear fender of a 1971 Suzuki 90cc trail bike, with addition aluminum grafted on to get that 1930s style.
The chain extension required making rollers carried on dual motorcycle sealed front wheel bearings, a lot of chain and a smaller front sprocket.
This has been a very reliable around town bike and hauls “stuff” in the saddle bags inside the rear body. Downhill I have seen 28 mph and it feels a little spooky but doesn’t get twitchy. Most comfortable cruise is about 15 mph using medium pedal assist to save battery range…but it is not near as efficient as a bicycle. Despite all the aluminum and fiberglass (lay up with all epoxy NOT polyesterene resin) it weighs 120 pounds.
The little old ladies walking the local path all say, “I want one of those!” They like the old fashioned style.
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