Yes you can. Upgrades will be needed but then is common with most bikes when being motorized. I've installed a Staton Inc. crank drive system. This allowed the auto shift feature to be kept. A Robin Subaru EHO35 engine drives a 18.75:1 gear box. The gear box drives the crank. This means the motor and/or peddles can use all 21 gears. The front three are manually shifted and the rear seven shift automatically. There are some techniques you'll need to learn to keep the shifting smooth. Afterwards you'll find it works great.
I wouldn't. Land rider isn't the best bicycle to begin with, so it's uncertain how it'll deal with the added strain of being motorised.
Absolutely under no circumstances should anyone buy the landrider bicycle. It weighs 43lbs, uses the lowest quality components and will be hard to find service for. Autoshifting is just a deraileur with a rubber band hooked to a weight that makes it shift exactly when you don't want it to. They say 7 gears for flat land and Seven for hills ...just stupid that is no where near correct. Stay away from this waste of metal. Get a three speed townie or a single speed cruiser.
With enough work you certainly can, but there's not much point to it. There are no ready-made kits available so you'd have to go at it by yourself. ANd after a lot of work probably end up with smoething quite dangerous and untrustworthy to ride.
thomas armandoThat's really a pointless question unless you specify what type of riding you're asking about - track, road, DH, Time Trial etc.Even then it's still quite uninteresting, as cyclists mainly race other cyclist. As long as you're the fastest of the pack, the speed as such doesn't really matter.
Land Escape is a bicycle and tandem manufacturer situated in the United Kingdom. They also organise various bicycle and tandem retreats.
It's called a bicycle
it made an eaiser way to travel on land. So if u had to go somewhere and you didnt have a car you can use a bicycle instead.
By a GIANT Monster? or what?
Sam Whittingham holds the land speed record of 83mph on a flat surface, set 2009.Other men have been faster going downhill, or drafting behind a motorized vehicle, but it is pointless to keep track of such records which have more to do with equipment or terrain than the athlete.Can't answer the question really, but I seem to recall watching in the 80's a tv programme of the likes of Tomorrow's World, that featured a bicycle with an outrageously large front sprocket and an equally outrageously small rear sprocket.The rider was immediately behind a fairing mounted on a pickup truck that presumably reduced the wind resistance experienced by the rider to virtually zero. I don't remember the actual maximum speed attained by the rider, but it was well in excess of 100mph!Anybody else remember seeing this programme?
An amphibious bicycle would be able to travel both on land and in the water, as a kind of boat.
crocodile land
Yes, if they were attacking, but no if they were not, it was too dangerous