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  2. Flexible Flyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_Flyer

    Allen began producing sleds in his farm equipment factory to keep his workers busy even when it was not the farm season. He developed many prototypes before he created the Flexible Flyer. The sleds did not sell well until he began marketing them to the toy departments of department stores. In 1915, around 120,000 Flexible Fliers were sold, and ...

  3. Sled - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sled

    The word "motor sled" [10] is colloquial term for a snowmobile; The Inuit qamutiik is uniquely adapted for travel on the sea ice. [11] The pulk (or ahkio) is a traditional sled of the Lapland region, used for expeditions, mountain rescue, and cold weather military units to haul equipment, supplies, and passengers. Rescue toboggan, developed ...

  4. Kicksled - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kicksled

    One can have a passenger or luggage on the chair seat. The kicksled can also be used as a dog sled. A kicksled is designed to be used on hard, slippery surfaces like ice or hardpacked snow. To kicksled in deeper, more powdery snow, extra-wide plastic snow runners are attached to the standard, thin runners of the sled.

  5. Sledding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sledding

    Sleds with a greater surface area (anything but runner sleds) are able to make the first runs a great deal easier than the variety of sleds with metal runners. Runner sleds are typically faster once the snow has compacted or turned icy. In the 1880s, Samuel Leeds Allen invented the first steerable runner sled, the Flexible Flyer. Since that ...

  6. Skeleton (sport) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skeleton_(sport)

    The stripped-down design provided a compact sled with metal runners, and the design caught on quickly. In 1902, Arden Bott added a sliding seat to help athletes shift their weight forward and backward, a feature that is no longer included on modern sleds. In 2010, the FIBT restricted the materials with which skeleton sleds are permitted to be made.

  7. Training sled - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Training_sled

    A training sled, weight sled, or fitness sled is a piece of exercise equipment that provides resistance as the user pushes, pulls, or otherwise moves the sled along a flat surface. [1] Commercial sleds allow easily adjusting the weight or resistance and are supported on feet or wheels that allow moving the sled across surfaces such as grass ...

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  9. Qamutiik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qamutiik

    A qamutiik (Inuktitut: ᖃᒧᑏᒃ; [1] alternate spellings qamutik (single sledge runner), komatik, Greenlandic: qamutit [2]) is a traditional Inuit sled designed to travel on snow and ice. It is built using traditional Inuit design techniques and is still used in the 21st century for travel in Arctic regions.