it would work perfectly well as it did and still does on the Vincent motor cycles of the fotties and fifties their clutch was centrifgal the initail drive being taken up by a single clutch plate as then centrifugal part of the clutch came in as the revs increased
Then the moon would fall on us and we would start eating spaghetti.
on a racing lawn mower it would be good, just rev up your engine and will engage.
a motorbike would cost about £2000-£10000 it depends on witch motorbike you are buying
y would you ship a motorbike to Australia anyways
We can't see this centrifugal clutch, so we would suggest YOU removing the cover and looking to see what has gone wrong. possibly the friction surfaces have worn down, or a spring could have broken or come loose.
I would get that stolen motorbike to the proper authorities ASAP and try to keep myself out of a heap of trouble!
Earth would drift toward the sun due to no centrifugal force being exerted anymore. We'd all burn.
The best website to sell a used motorbike would be ebay.com, craigslist.com or cycleclassifieds.us. You might also have some luck with autotrader.com.
centrifugal and centripetal
In most countries it would be illegal to drive a motorbike without having insurance to cover you if you caused harm to some third party.
I am assuming you mean the Suzuki GSXR600 motorcycle. ANY motorcycle whose engine dies when you engage first gear MOST PROBABLY has a CLUTCH problem. Have the clutch tightened. To check whether the clutch is CLEARING the gear, do the following: 1. With the engine turned off, hold the clutch and put the motorcycle in first gear. 2. While holding the clutch, push the motorbike forward. If the rear tire allows the motorcycle to move forward, the clutch is engaging properly and clearing the gear. If the motorcycle won't budge with the clutch engaged, the clutch is not engaging properly. If the clutch has been tightened and is too hard to engage, you might want to have a mechanic open the motorcycle and check the clutch discs- they might be worn out.
All forces are vector quantities. Consequently, if "centrifugal force" actually existed, it would be a vector quantity.