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  2. Unicycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicycle

    Unicycles usually, but not always, lack brakes, gears, and the ability to freewheel. Given these differences, the injuries that can occur from unicycle use tend to be different from that of bicycle use. In particular, head injuries are significantly less likely among unicycle use compared to bicycle use. [3]

  3. List of bicycle types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bicycle_types

    Come-apart bike, (essentially a unicycle, plus a set of handlebars attached to forks and a wheel). Reverse-steering bike, in which rotation of the handlebars is transmitted to the front wheel through a pair of interlocking cogs, so that turning to the left steers the bike to the right. [16]

  4. Velocipede - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocipede

    The term 'velocipede' is today mainly used as a collective term for the different forerunners of the monowheel, the unicycle, the bicycle, the dicycle, the tricycle and the quadracycle developed between 1817 and 1880.

  5. Cycling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycling

    European city bike Children riding a bike in Ghana. Cycling, [1] also known as bicycling [2] or biking, [3] is the activity of riding a bicycle or other type of cycle. It encompasses the use of human-powered vehicles such as balance bikes, unicycles, tricycles, and quadricycles.

  6. Monowheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monowheel

    A monowheel rider in the 2011 Doo Dah Parade, Columbus, Ohio Hemmings' Unicycle, or "Flying Yankee Velocipede", was a hand-powered monowheel patented in 1869 by Richard C. Hemmings. [1] 1931 Cislaghi Motoruota monowheel, modified by Giuseppe Govetosa. A monowheel or uniwheel is a type of one-wheeled, single-track vehicle.

  7. Penny-farthing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penny-farthing

    A penny-farthing in the Škoda Auto Museum, Czech Republic. The penny-farthing, also known as a high wheel, high wheeler or ordinary, is an early type of bicycle. [1] It was popular in the 1870s and 1880s, with its large front wheel providing high speeds, owing to it travelling a large distance for every rotation of the wheel.

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