Sunday, June 1, 2008

Angled Parking Experiment

North College Avenue, looking South
Lancaster experimented with angled parking for an afternoon on June 1. At three locations around town, the City re-lined the streets with tape to see how it would work out. The reason is traffic calming; the City is looking for ways to reduce speeding.

North Plum Street, facing NorthThe photos to the right are of North Plum Street. The street was re-marked to have parallel parking along the East side, two lanes of travel (one in each direction), and angled parking on the west side. Cars are meant to back into the spots and pull out head-first.

Results, in my opinion, were mixed. Traffic definitely slowed on N. Plum St., but that could be attributed to confusion and the cones. Buses had difficulty, but those problems can be worked out. The worst part was sight distance when exiting an alley in the middle of the block. And I think people were flumoxed by driving with the grain of the herringbone pattern; this is opposite to the way angled parking in works in parking lots.

There were good points, though. North Plum Street, facing SouthBecause of the staggering of the cars, not only do car doors not open into the travel lane, they don't even hit other cars. And kids getting out of cars will automatically be funneled back to the sidewalk. That last point was told to me by Mayor Rick Gray who was personally checking the results on his yellow Harley. That's him, in the shadows, on the right.

Friday, May 30, 2008

2008 Buyers Guide

The May issue of Scoot Magazine, on news stands now, contains a 2008 buyers guide featuring over 120 models. All models are believed to be legal in America. This is a very definitive guide. Go pick one up. I was just at Barnes and Noble, and they had a stack on the shelf in with the motorcycle magazines.

The Buyers Guide also includes some buying tips which I've not seen anywhere else. I won't give them here because I don't want to steal their thunder. But I will give you the list of manufacturers they cover:

Adly Moto
Italjet Dragster
Aprilia

Argo

Cobra

Daelim

Diamo

eGo

Fly

Genuine

Honda Tank Courier 150

Hyosung

Italjet

Kymco

Lambretta

Lance

Piaggio

QLink

Schwinn

Suzuki

Sym
Vespa S
Tank Sports

TNG

Tomos

Vectrix

Vespa

Yamaha

Electric Scooter Question

Hope asks, "...I'm thinking of getting a scooter. My husband saw electric scooters today although I don't know what store he saw them in. I know you need a motorcycle license for a gas powered scooter but do you need one for the electric ones?"

Dear Hope,

License in PA is determined by engine power, not fuel type. The cut off is 5 brake horsepower. Under, a regular automobile license will do. Over, you need a motorcycle license. (Source) Brake horsepower means horsepower measured at the motor, not at the drive wheel. Actual power of the scooter will be less.

To be driven on the highways and roadways of the Commonwealth, a motor vehicle must be registered, titled, inspected and insured. If the scooter doesn’t have a have a license plate, an inspection sticker, and turn signals, I doubt it’s street legal.

I don't have any personal experience with electric scooters, so I don't know if the electric ones are any good. But the idea is tempting...

Saturday, May 24, 2008

The Scooter Review

I found this website: The Scooter Review. Looks like it has lots of good information. But I think it's european from New Zealand, so you might not be able to find every model locally.

WSJ

Scooters make the big time with an artcle in the Wall Street Journal: Linky! They even mention my C3, which they call "ultra-utilitarian" and at the high end of the fuel efficiency range. Yep, that's why I got it.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Ohh... BradFIELD Motors.

Hmm. Apparently Bradford Motors in Mount Joy is actually Bradfield Motors. Well, that makes more sense.

More Buzz

Yep, high gas prices really have people looking at scooters. They're even talking about them on the newspaper's website. Apparently staring down $4/gallon gas has people at that tipping point where they consider changing their behavior and buying a scooter.

And the scooter many are buying is the Yamaha Vino, pictured here in blue recently at B&B Yamaha. They come in 50cc and 150cc models.

Behind it is the new white version of the C3. It's a pretty color, but I bet it gets dirty quick. I was really hoping to see the new red color.

If you've come here looking for information about scooters, take a look around. There's lots of information here. Be sure to check out the links along the side. Or start here.


Scooter-Relief.org