Do you have a trike with a rigid frame, in other words, one that is not suspended? Are you getting tired of all those nasty road irregularities knocking you around and loosening the fillings in your teeth? Had enough torture for this lifetime? Want a posh and smile-producing experience? Well then, Loopwheels may offer a solution, according to their website. Essentially, with these wheels on a rigid trike, the trike is no longer rigid, that is to say, once installed in place of traditional spoked wheels, you now have full suspension in all three corners of your triangulated realm! Cool.
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19, buy, car, change, cost, coupe, first, genesis, lowered, prior, put, putting, rims, supension, suspension, system Reply Closed Thread Share Facebook Twitter Reddit Contact Us - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Do Not Sell My Personal Information - Contact Us - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Do Not Sell My Personal Information - Top Account ({0}) Make Aprilia Baccio Bintelli BMS Chicago Scooter Company Eton Fly Scooter Genuine Honda Icebear Jonway Keeway Kymco Lance NIU Other Makes (Chinese) Peace Sports Peugeot Piaggio Polaris Puma Cycles Royal Alloy Schwinn Scoot Star Sears Allstate SSR Motorsports SunL Suzuki SYM Tao Tao TGB Velocity Vespa (Modern) Vespa P/PX Series Vespa Vintage Large Frame Vespa Vintage Small Frame Wolf Yamaha ZNEN Model Accessories Electrical System Batteries Electrical Lighting Spark Plugs Engine & Transmission Engine Transmission Rubber & Gaskets Gaskets Rubber Parts Fuel System & Exhaust Carburetor / Fuel System Exhaust Filters Scooter Maintenance Oil / Chemicals Tools Seats & Chassis Badges / Emblems Bodywork Cables Controls / Instruments Floormats / Floor Rails Wheels & Suspension Brakes Suspension / Steering Tires / Rims Sidecars Sidecars Shop by Diagram Shop by Diagram Login | Create Account | Wishlist This section is literally where the rubber meets the road. We’ve got scooter tires from Shinko, Continental, Prima and Vee Rubber, front and rear shock absorbers from Bitubo and NCY, NCY front end kits and rims for the Honda Ruckus and brake pads and shoes for most scooters out on the road. Home Bitubo (11) BLUE LINE (9) Chicago Scooter Company (43) Continental (19) FA Italia (6) Faco (1) Malossi (4) Mec Eur (62) Motion Pro (1) NCY (109) Pinasco (6) Prima (25) RMS (6) Scooterworks (4) Shinko (16) Tutti Ricambi (4) Vee Rubber (33) YSS Racing (4) Sort By Best Match Price (High to Low) Price (Low to High) 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page 1 of 42 Shipping | Policies | Brands |Careers | Contact | Blog | Become a Dealer © 2020 Scooterworks USA, LLC. Scooterworks USA, LLC is not affiliated with Piaggio USA, Inc. or Piaggio & Co., S.p.A., Vespa is a Registered Trademark of Piaggio & Co., S.p.A. Softwheel uses inner suspension arms to re-invent the wheel for bikes and chairs [video] Posted on February 13, 2014 by Brian Nitz in Transportation
The wheelchair application seems to run straight into the eternal problem with sprung wheels. Without dampers, they bounce badly, as sometimes seen in tractors fitted with buckets on a bad road. With dampers, they have very high rolling resistance. I tire needs enough flex to meet the ground, but any further suspension should be on the axle. Lardo January 30, 2018 06:00 PM
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Note: when sorting by date, 'descending order' will show the newest results first. Contains unread posts Contains no unread posts Hot thread with unread posts Hot thread with no unread posts Thread is closed You have posted in this thread You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts BB code is On Smilies are On [IMG] code is On [VIDEO] code is On HTML code is Off -- Mirage Forum Desktop Style (full-featured) -- Mirage Forum Mobile Style Contact Us MirageForum.com - Mitsubishi Mirage / Space Star / Attrage / Dodge Attitude Forum and Owners Club Archive Top Threads Google Threads Posts Advanced View First Unread Thread Tools Search this Thread Log In | Register By logging into your account, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, and to the use of cookies as described therein. AcuraZine - Acura Enthusiast Community > AcuraZine TL/TLX Community > Second Generation TL (1999-2003) > 2G TL Tires, Wheels & Suspension By logging into your account, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, and to the use of cookies as described therein. i have already bought my rims, i havent put them on yet, should change my suspension first to like the look when its stock, or should i put my rims and change my suspension accordingly Reply Like how much you should lower the car depends on the rims. post some pics of the rims first. also depends on how much you drive in the snow, which i assume you do quite a bit living in canada. maybe some other members have some first hand experience of driving in the snow with a lowered car? I'd change suspension first, then wheels.... but to each their own... ultimately it's up to you. you should always drop first... then buy the rims to fit accordingly... also, putting rims on a stock height car (i know somebody will be butt hurt over this) yeah dont make the same mistake i did... i totally regret getting rims 1st =/ ok .. but if i change my suspension accordingly to my 16 inch stock rims, then put on 19'zz i think it depends on what your unique situation is. if there are rims you really like, buy them and work around it. plus, if your facing winter every year, you do not want to be dropped too much, you'll be sliding all over since you will have a lower center of gravity and have more of a grip demand on your tires. if you drop it three inches, now you need to stick with a really high offset, so that will limit your wheel choices. i think it works the same way no matter what you do-suspension first will limit your wheel options...wheels first will limit your suspension options. do you want to be scraping low with small wheels, or keep it practical with bigger wheels, it's your choice!! in my situation, i really wanted a certain wheel which happened to have a low offset, so i can't lower it too much. i am also up against winter in new england, and shitty roads. so i knew i wasn't lowering too much, i just want to close the wheel gap. so i got the wheels i wanted, which are 19x8 +40 w/ 235/35 tires, learned i have about 2" in the rear and 3" up front to work with, and from there purchased the eibach pro-system-plus which will give me exactly what i'm looking for...improved handling, very little gap in the wheel well, and a lower than stock stance....done & done!! buddy thanks a million, i think u just answered my question, i have the same width rims and tires. i was wondering how much room i might have in order to figure the suspension.
A Kickstarter project has already raised £48,000, exceeding the £40,000 target needed to get production started, and Mr Pearce, who is developing the wheel with his wife Gemma, admitted he was stunned by the response.
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It’s a good idea to schedule regular inspections of your steering and suspension systems. It is usually easier, cheaper and safer to discover and fix a problem before it snowballs, causing further consequences.
To ensure that its product lived up to user standards, Softwheel turned to Dror Cohen, who became a paraplegic after a car accident in 1992. Cohen eventually became a decorated athlete, leading Israel to the gold medal in sailing (sonar class) in the 2004 Paralympics in Athens, Greece.