Gallery: One-Wheeled Motorcycles: As Cool as They Are Wildly Dangerous
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A Swiss engineer known as Mr. Gerdes designed this monowheel. It is pictured here, ridden by a man who may or may not be Mr. Gerdes, apparently on a trip to Spain in 1931.
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J.H. Purves's Dynosphere, a wide-based monowheel variant built in the UK.
Photo courtesy of Sean Donley03christie workshop a
Professor E.J. Christie of Marion, Ohio atop a version of his 14 foot monster monowheel in 1923, which may or may not have been tested. It apparently had a 250 horsepower motor, and was its designers were aiming for a top speed of 250 mph (safe to say that never happened).
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Walter Nilsson aboard his version of the monowheel in Los Angeles around 1935. His assistant is riding an old timey penny farthing bike.
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Purves's son takes the Dynosphere for a spin on Brean Sands Beach in the UK, 1932.
Photo courtesy of Douglas Self06group photo1b
This 1917 picture of the D'harlingue monowheel, from Douglas Self's online museum for the devices, shows why the motorized wheels have become the stuff of steampunk mystique.
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