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HahaI am seriously considering this as my work is within a mile radius so an old bloke like me can handle it /emoticons/biggrin.png
Not what the chap has done but a custom made bike with roughly a 350l tank. /emoticons/biggrin.png
How class would that be /emoticons/tongue.png lolOr maybe fancy this mad max wfp buggy /emoticons/biggrin.png
couldnt resist lolThink id un hitch that trailer and go for a few donuts in the snow!
Hi DougNo its an actual bike with a big box in the front which could probably hold 350 litres of water
Recommended to someone who had lost his licence for drink related issues on another forum onceSeen it before. Lol.. Don't see the point it in really
Yip that's them Spruce. As a kid I was more excited about the ice than the ice cream /emoticons/biggrin.pngHi Doug
They where very popular in Zambia and Zimbabwe and used by icecream vendors. They would be filled with dry ice and icecreams and pedalled around the estates ringing a bell to attract the youngsters.
You would also see the clever ones who would park under a tree in the shade at a busy spot selling his wares with very little energy.
The milkman also used to use a similar thing to deliver milk early in the morning. The dairy would have conveniently place lockup boxes and the milkman would come back to these to replenish his cart and drop off the empties he had collected.
I doubt that they could carry 350 litres through - far too heavy. I had a trailer that had 375 litres when full and that would have been possible to push around with any ease. Holding that weight on a hill would also have been a no go.
In South Africa the africans tended to us them as bread delivery bikes or shop keepers for delivering small amounts of produce to local customers.