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Magnificent three-wheel driving machinesThe guy who invented the wheel was an idiot. The guy who invented the other three, he was a genius! So the saying goes. What shall we call the three-wheelers, then?
There is no written record of the first mention of the wheel, but an illustration of a wheel was found in the Sindh Province of India dating from about 4,000 BC. The Bible and other old scriptures have many references to chariots, perhaps the most famous being those of the Egyptian pharoas. And while the movies depict the glory of ancient Roman chariots, those were horse-drawn. The first mention of a carriage that moved on its own accord came from traders who visited the mysterious far East empires of Cathay and T'chin. The traders spoke of carriages which moved with the aid of fire. Perhaps these carriages were steam powered, the technology being known to the Chinese by 800 BC. Plato, in his Hero of Alexandria of 150 BC, mentioned some 70 steam inventions. In 50 BC, Heron of Greece proposed a steam engine but Rome feared that his concept would create unemployment and lead to unrest. Steam power for vehicles would be mentioned again many years later when Jesuit priest Ferdianand Verbiest, who worked in China from 1659 until his death in 1688, left a description of a steam car he had built. It had five wheels. The first carThe first "modern" mechanically-propelled vehicle capable of transporting people and goods was invented by a French artillery officer; in 1769, Nicolas Joseph Cugnot drove his steam tractor in the presence of the Duke of Choiseul in Paris at an impressive 2.5 miles per hour. The exact design is not known - the tractor was later broken up when it overturned - but It is thought to have been a three-wheeler. Modern three-wheelersA number of early car manufacturers produced three-wheelers. Some of the best known are: British car maker AC, established in 1908, produced a three-wheeler; Fast three-wheelersIt is not only motorcycle-based three-wheelers that can make your hair stand on edge. In 1964, Craig Breedlove took on the Bonneville Salt Flats in his three-wheeler and reached 526.27mph, breaking the Land Speed Record. His three-wheeler was called The Spirit of America. The pinnacle of three-wheel technology combined with luxury, however, can be found in the Carver One. And excellent vehicle in all aspects, it also is candy for the eye. View the full specs at the official Carver site |
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Video : Carver Venture One driven by Jaime Chambers, KTLA Los Angeles, June 18th 2007
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