History of the motor bikes�
Even as the first car in the world, the first motor bike in the world was born in Germany. Is Gottlieb Daimler and its associate, Wilhelm Maybach, the two experts, the four engines German, which created the first motor bike in the world.�
In the year 1885, pairs of engine of Daimler four small stages on a bicycle out of wooden. Machines are placed in the medium (between the nose gear wheels and back) and are connected to the chain with the aft wheel.�
Motorized bicycle of wood which is given named Reitwagen (car of horsemanship) and is the first motor bike in the world. Test Reitwagen de Maybach far as 3 kilometers along the river Neckar, of Cannstatt with Untert�rkheim, with the speed of 12 kilometers per hour.�
At this moment, Reitwagen not sold with the public. The installation of the engine on the bicycle which is series of wood of an experiment led by Daimler and Maybach, before installing the engine on the carriage four horse-drawn, which is the embryo of the birth of the car.�
The year 1893, the first motor bike was sold with the public created by the und Wolfm�ller de Hildebrand of motor bike of factory in Muenchen, Germany. The motor bikes do not employ this chain. The aft wheel is led directly by a crutch (crankshaft).�
First entry of motor bike towards the United States in the year 1895 when a French origin of the circus carried it to New York. Called, in same year, an inventor of the United States, EJ Pennington, in Milwaukee, showing a motor bike was conceived. Pennington indicated, a motor bike that it can conceive the dipacu with speed 93 kilometers per hour, and one regards it as as a first nobody presenting the motor bike of limit (motor cycle).�
It is a motor bike had by the potter of John C, the first Oemboel factory, Probolinggo, East Java of sugar of machinist, in 1893. It was reserved to have the motor bike is directly to the manufacturer in Muenchen. Potter of remarkable John as a first nobody to have a motor bike in Indonesia, which then always under the Dutch trade, and Dutch called (Nederlands Indie).�
Friday, February 20, 2009
History of the motor bikes
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