Will you be putting a latch that can hold the hand clutch disengaged when stopped?
I was not sure of what this was and looked at Wikipedia and noted where they talked of when a foot clutch was called a suicide clutch if there was no detent. Detent would lock it so you could put both feet on the ground when stopped.
They had this picture of some old motorcycle, looks as if the throttle is a lever on the opposite of the hand clutch. Also like some old British made motor cycles like the Triumph had the throttle and the clutch was on the opposite side.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cf/ABC_french_918.JPG
My dad got thrown from just going a few feet down a drive way when he got by the edge of cement and the lawn a long time ago. Had a few stitches in his chin.
I was not around when it happened and he was the one who helped me start to build the motor bike. One of my brothers wanted to ride it too soon. I had not gotten anything better than a lawn mower type stiff wired throttle without any return spring attached. It had not even been yet mounted anywhere.
The brother of mine took the throttle, put it at max, stuffed it in his pocket to get it out of the way, and then controlled speed by choking pulses!
Prior to that, my brother was riding it before I got all the mounting bolts on the engine. They’re supposed to be three points of attachment. Two on the bottom bar and 1 strap from one of the engine head bolts to the top bar. With only the forward bottom bolt, an impromptu clutch was had.
He nudged forward with one foot on the engine to swing it forward and take slack out of the v-belt drive he was off.
Eventually I got it with a twist grip throttle and a centrifugal v-belt clutch as well as a low tension kill switch. The choke throttle / engine cut off and no clutch (but with all engine bolts on) was kind of crazy!
Measure Twice