A road bike offers a more preformance-oriented, streamlined hunched over riding position and bike design, while a cruiser bike has the rider more upright and is more set up for comfort than speed.
A normal bike is different that a cruiser bike in many ways. A cruiser is not meant to be ridden long distances and is mostly meant for having an easy ride. A road bike is meant to go long distances and is therefore lighter.
Really depends on what you mean by a "regular bike". But road bikes tend to be lighter, more slender and focused more on speed than everyday usefullness compared to a regular bike.
Depends on the type of bike. For a road bike - no. For a hardtail MTB - no. For a full suspension DH MTB - kinda. For a townie/dutch bike with fenders, rack and all - yes.
A performance bike is more like a regular bicycle although it is a rather good one. A Dirt bike is a motorcycle than can be used on off road terrain.
An enduro bike is specialised for nature of the sport, with the deep suspension of a motocross bike combined with the features required to make it legal for the public road portions of the course. Engines are generally single-cylinder two stroke between 125 and 300cc. or four stroke between 250 and 650cc. It really is a mix of a road bike and a dirt bike. it has the knobby tires and suspension of a dirt bike, but the characteristics of a road bike too.
A road bike is faster on the road than a mountain bike. That's all
A cruiser bike is a bike that gives an upright riding postion, is usually blinged out, and is ridden rather sedately. MTBs are available in several different versions(XC, AM, DH), but basically they're about providing a compromise between ruggedness and rideability. Mountain bikes have much knobblier tires and usually have suspension, which is rarely available on cruisers. Mountain bikes are also used competitively.
The bike road is between eterna city and oreburg city. to get a bike, you have to rescue the bike shop owner from team galactic, and visit his shop.
a 56cm road bike is a road bike that the frame is 56 Cm. if didn't full fill you answer I'm sorry:
my huffy roadside cruiser is from the early sixtys
Possibly. Laws do not often make distinction between bicycles and motorbikes. Provided the bike is road-legal, there should be no problem.
It's a sort of a cross between MTB and road bikes. Slimmer than the all-out MTB, but more rugged and a more upright riding position than a regular road bike.