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  2. List of microcars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_microcars

    [1] even though in Japan such cars are known as kei cars. Microcars have also been defined as being a "small car, popular in the 1950s, that featured a body offering full weather protection and mechanics often derived from motorcycle technology", [ 2 ] though in the 1950s, a trend towards egg-shaped cars with a relatively large ratio of windows ...

  3. Horse-drawn vehicle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse-drawn_vehicle

    Training cart or training trap: a simple sprung or unsprung two-person modern cart for training a harness horse on smooth roads. Often made of steel with motorcycle wheels, and sometimes with adjustable shafts for different-sized horses. Trap: an open sprung cart. Often used in a general sense to cover any small passenger-carrying cart.

  4. Sulky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulky

    A sulky is a lightweight cart used for harness racing. It has two wheels and a small seat for only a single driver. The modern racing sulky has shafts that extend in a continuous bow behind the driver's seat, with wire-spoked "bike" wheels and inflated tyres. [1] [2] A sulky is frequently called a "bike".

  5. Microcar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcar

    Microcar is a term often used for the smallest size of cars, [1] with three or four wheels and often an engine smaller than 700 cc (43 cu in). Specific types of microcars include bubble cars, cycle cars, invacar, quadricycles and voiturettes. [2]

  6. Caroline's Cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline's_Cart

    A Caroline's Cart is a specific type of shopping cart which allows for the assisted locomotion of non-ambulatory adults or larger children. The Caroline's Cart was invented by Drew Ann Long, a mother of a special needs daughter from Alabama. [ 1 ]

  7. Governess cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governess_cart

    The cart was also relatively safe, being difficult to either fall from, overturn, or to injure oneself with either the horse or wheels. The governess cart was a relatively late development in horse-drawn vehicles, appearing around 1900 as a substitute for the dogcart. These were a similar light cart, but their high exposed seats had a poor ...

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