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A Doodle Bug scooter in the Crawford Auto-Aviation Museum The Doodle Bug was a motor scooter built from 1946 to 1948 [ 1 ] by the Beam Manufacturing Company [ 2 ] of Webster City, Iowa , US. [ 1 ] They were sold through the Gambles store chain to compete against Cushman scooters being sold under the Allstate brand by Sears . [ 2 ]
A teen on a minibike in Thailand. While the minibike had precursors in machines such as the Doodle Bug and Cushman Scooters, which share smaller wheels, tubular-steel frames, and air-cooled, single-cylinder engines, those vehicles had larger seat heights and lighting that allow them to be registered for road use as scooters.
Rupp's greatest change to their mini bike lineup in any year was arguably 1970. [original research?] The frame was entirely redesigned, changing from a dual loop frame to a single loop frame, and spoke-type wheels were introduced. The Roadster and Scrambler's 6" wheels were augmented to 10" spoke wheels and a new model, the Enduro was manufactured.
Other common traits of scooters can include: bodywork (so the mechanicals are not exposed like a conventional motorcycle), motors combined with the suspension or wheel (rather than attached to the frame like a conventional motorcycle), leg shields, smaller wheels than a conventional motorcycle, and an alternative to a chain drive. [1]
Minibike race at Lelystad (NL) Ivar training at Wilrijk (B) Jerowe at the Sutton track in Ontario, Canada Pocketbikes are small, two wheeled recreational vehicles approximately one-quarter the size of a regular motorcycles, and are powered by two-stroke internal combustion engines of between 40 and 50 cc. Pocketbikes maintain the look of full-sized sport bikes and are known outside of North ...
Kinesis Industry Co. Ltd. is a manufacturer of aluminum and carbon fiber bicycle frames, forks, and components. Based in Taiwan, it has a plant in Guangzhou, China, and an American subsidiary (Kinesis USA, Inc.) in Portland, Oregon that generated $5-$10 million in annual sales until ceasing production and closing its doors in 2006. [1]