8a
you are allowed on the path but not the road.
Yes, but you need to obey the road rules.
NO, because it is not a street legal vehicle and can only be driven off road.
There are no cities or towns in Montana that begin with X. If you need X for Montana, Xit Road is the name of a street in Terry, Montana. Xeno Road is the name of a street in Chinook, Montana.
In South Carolina you can never ride a fourwheeler on a street of any kind.
King Street in Hammersmith is a public highway and there are no restrictions on who can drive there although part of it is one-way. The same for Kings Road in Chelsea.
It depends on the state. Check with your state's DMV. It probably does need to be if driven on the street, but not if used off road.
Yes. Off road vehicles do not require insurance.
At the post office, on the road when they have to drive and on the street when they are in a town and letters and parcels need to be delivered to people's homes.
Most times the street will be halfway open, as in a one lane road that is used by both directions of traffic. if this does not happen to be the case you will need to park elsewhere and walk to your home.
A pothole is a hole in a street caused by traffic and weather. It is caused by events above the street. A sinkhole is caused when land beneath the street is washed away or water empties out of a cave from beneath a street. In that case, the street falls down into the hole created when the road collapses when the ground gives way. Potholes are far easier to fix than sinkholes. Potholes need to be filled in and they are ready to be driven over. With sinkholes, the underlying problem must be filled in or the road must be rerouted. After the sinkhole is filled in or the road rerouted then the road must be rebuilt.
Certainly not on private property, on the road it would need to be street legal and you would probably need a class C license.