Hi Rick, had to take the bike into town to get some gas for the lawn tractor and I took four pictures of my old 49cc buildI like the steel frame and stretched dimensions of this bikes design. I've a couple of questions that could be more easily answered if you would post a couple of photos of your bike with motor mounted.
Over the years I've put heavier and more powerful motors than the Predator 212 on just bicycle frames and with some restraint on my part they held together really well. Act the fool and they will hurt you and mature gentlemen don't heal well.
Of my more recent "motorcycle" builds one was a complete one off frame and the other utilizes major frame strengthening of an already great purpose built, for motorized use frame. Both include an operational pedal bracket and I still run bicycle hubs, wheels and tires. I like the look of all these things on vintage style builds, and they are a constant reminder not to ride 70 plus mph...just because I can doesn't mean I should!
It's obvious in reading your posts that you've thought through what your building and I look forward to seeing the progress photos.
Welcome to the forum, there are many of us older fellows involved in moto-bicycling.....
Rick C.
and the 212cc. Since there is no kickstand on the 212 I used two block to support it. I'm waiting on a new kickstand
to come in maybe later today? I've got a lot of parts I need to get on order and no time to mess with the bike since I've
had so much outside work to get done this season.
Got several parts in today and the one I was really needed was the kickstand. The 30 lb. engine actually needsI like the steel frame and stretched dimensions of this bikes design. I've a couple of questions that could be more easily answered if you would post a couple of photos of your bike with motor mounted.
Over the years I've put heavier and more powerful motors than the Predator 212 on just bicycle frames and with some restraint on my part they held together really well. Act the fool and they will hurt you and mature gentlemen don't heal well.
Of my more recent "motorcycle" builds one was a complete one off frame and the other utilizes major frame strengthening of an already great purpose built, for motorized use frame. Both include an operational pedal bracket and I still run bicycle hubs, wheels and tires. I like the look of all these things on vintage style builds, and they are a constant reminder not to ride 70 plus mph...just because I can doesn't mean I should!
It's obvious in reading your posts that you've thought through what your building and I look forward to seeing the progress photos.
Welcome to the forum, there are many of us older fellows involved in moto-bicycling.....
Rick C.
a sturdy stand like the scooters and mini-dirt bikes have. The new stand seems to be working out and the stock
one plus the other one I bought didn't. I ended up putting a better kickstand on the 49cc last year after having a
wind gust collapsed the stock one. The Micargi had the worse one I've ever seen quality wise and the Sixthreezer
seemed like a heavy one so I suppose I got one with a flaw in it. I think work on this bike will go through the Winter
and right now I've got too much work outside to catch up on. Mowing this year has kept me busy plus working on
the tractor and buying parts for it to keep it running.
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