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To: Pikamax
I am told that in Western countries, if someone builds such a thing, he would get a medal and become rich.

If someone built a similar car here it wouldn't pass safety, CAFE and emissions standards thanks to the bustard FEDS!

Because I kinda like these tiny fun cars and give the guy credit for putting the machine together here are some more thoughts.

IMO He didn't manufacture it...he assembled it. While he may have the capability to do fiberglass fenders I doubt he produced the bumper covers by himself. They look like off the shelf parts from some other micro-car. Still quite good work fro where he is.

Cost. He says he made it for 900 bucks. Well heck I bet I could make a moveable vehicle for that amount or less using junkyard parts and cobbling up a few fiberglass panels. But what about the selling price? To make any kind of profit he'd have to MSRP at least at $2700 - $3000 (2.25 markup plus 30% and I think that formula is kinda low these days). So we're talking around $2500 customers price for a 2 seater with a 100cc motorcycle engine. which brings me to....

100cc motorcycle engine. WAY too small...it'll be gone in a few thousand miles in his part of the world...a couple of hundred here at most. My first bike was a new 1969 100cc Ymamha twin 2 stroke. I loved that bike even when I went to bigger rides. The engine did take some amazing abuse, I'll admit. It put out 10-11 bhp and could move Wife-To-Be and I (combined weight around 320lbs!) at a pretty good clip.

I ended up giving the bike to one of my brothers-in-law years later after which he promptly put it into the back of a pick-up truck. The bike flipped over the roof of the truck but the engine and transmission survived. I hung onto the parts for a dozen or so years and the engine still started when I finally got rid of it.

The reason I hung onto the parts was because I had in mind to build something similar to what this guy did...maybe a three wheeler aka the old Morgan.

The plans fell apart after I lived - survived actually - for several years with a Fiat X 1/9 and a Renault R-5 Le Car. After that I pretty much had my fill of tiny cars.

Kudos to the guy though.

FWIW the Fiat I mentioned went to another brother-in-law. On his first and only drive in it he
A) spun it into a neighbors garage door.
B) Missed a shift and blew the engine on a desolate rural road.
C) Along with his passenger consumed a case of brew while waiting to get rescued.
C) Smashed the back fo the Fiat while using a Dodge pick-up with HUGE oak bumper to push it back to the farm. (Much more brew sonsumed along the way)
D) Missed the barn and pushed it into the cesspool back at the farm. It ended it's life sinking in mud behind the barn.

The Le Car ended up traded for an R21 Renault/AMC Medallion - don't ask. It was sold to a couple of young fellows from WVA who thought it made a pretty cool getaway vehicle for a Stop-N-Rob spree thtought the WVA mountains.

It did pretty good too, getting away from the cop cruisers of the twisty mountain roads until it flipped over. The guys got out, flipped it back over and took off again. This happened couple of times before tiny Le Car's heart gave out and the bandits were nabbed.

How do I know this happened? During a very interesting phone conversation with the WVA state cops as I was sitting down to a Thanksgiving dinner. Seems the title was somehow never transferred and I was still the registered owner.

prisoner6

19 posted on 07/13/2003 10:54:49 PM PDT by prisoner6 ( Right Wing Nuts hold the country together as the loose screws of the left fall out!)
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To: prisoner6
I build go-karts and chopper mini-bikes in my garage in my spare time. A couple of years ago I shoehorned a 22 HP Briggs & Stratton horizontally opposed motor into an elctric golf cart with all the electrics gutted out of it. I mounted up some used 22" professional laws service equipment tires. The kind with big paddles rather than tread or knobs. It wouldn't corner all that fast but on the straight it would go like hell. I had it up over fifty before I had to get out of the pedal because the front end was shaking. The motor hadn't even broken a sweat yet though.

I would take it out in the fields behind my house and play for a couple of summers. What a beast. Strong as all get out. It would go over any terrain easily and could pull my 88 ford conversion van. Not quite as polished as the car in the article but it was alot more fun and I only had about 350 bucks in it.

Power to that cambodian fellow. I understand and apreciate exactly where his heads is at!
23 posted on 07/13/2003 11:58:53 PM PDT by Hitlerys uterus
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