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Vietnamese urban
dwellers now infatuated with electric solowheels
A
young man is seen riding a solowheel on a street in Vietnam.Tuoi
Tre
In recent times, a number of youths have taken up riding
electric unicycles in
A unicycle is a vehicle which touches the
ground with only one wheel.
The conventional variation, which is mostly
seen in circuses, has a frame with a saddle and is pedal-powered.
Meanwhile, the faddish electric unicycles, or solowheels, have only one
wheel, no seats and are electricity-driven.
Such vehicles have recently become quite a
common sight in parks or less crowded streets in
According to experts on electricity-driven
vehicles, solowheels first appeared at a technology fair in the
It was then expected to grow into a popular
vehicle which could replace automobiles on short routes to ease traffic
congestion, cut down on emissions, and thus help combat pollution.
The first such vehicles were imported into
With more supplies from
Traveling at 20km per hour at most
On a typical Saturday morning, Hoang Van Thu
Park in Tan Binh District burst with laughter and chatter from a group of
youngsters who are circling around on two solowheels.
Skilled riders demonstrate their flair and
show new practitioners how to ride the vehicle.
One of the group members told Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper reporters that it typically takes around a week of practice to
maneuver a solowheel with relative ease.
The simple solowheels boast only a wheel,
two foot resting areas, and a start button.
It is also equipped with a self-balance
system and boasts a posture management design which is generally used in the
spatial technology.
The vehicle moves forward when riders
slightly bend forward, and it will slow down and come to a complete stop if a
rider leans backward.
Solowheels can attain a maximum speed of
around 20 kilometers per hour, which is equivalent to that of a sport
bicycle.
A battery recharge, which takes 30 minutes,
allows riders to travel 25 kilometers.
Le Vu Quang Duy, who lives in District 1,
Once he maneuvered the vehicle with more
ease, he began practicing more technically challenging moves such as spinning
and riding it with only one foot.
“I mostly ‘perform’ in my spare time as a
hobby only. I think one should wear helmets for safety reasons if they use
unicycles as a means of transport,” Duy added.
Meanwhile, Nguyen Xuan Vu, 30, who lives in
the city’s Phu Nhuan District, has ridden his solowheel since June last year.
Previously, while he was working in an
office, he would often ride the vehicle to his workplace.
“The solowheel, which does not have a high
maximum speed, can be used in place of bicycles. I often switch the vehicle
off and pick it up to get away from congested street sections, and then
resume my rides after that,” he shared.
Vu stressed that many think he rides the
solowheel for fun only, but he mostly chooses it to help protect the
environment.
A popular means of transport?
Nguyen Le Hoang Khang, director of an import
company in Tan Binh District, Ho Chi Minh City, began importing solowheels
and registered for exclusive distribution in Vietnam in June last year.
He predicted that the solowheel can serve as
a potential alternative means of transport for city-dwellers in the near
future as the city’s metro system come into operation.
Commuters can board the urban trains while
carrying their solowheels and ride them when they get off the train to
get to their destination, Khang surmised.
However, opinions on the prospects of
solowheels as a popular alternative means of transport remain mixed.
According to a number of solowheel users,
unicycles have yet to grow in popularity as a normal person usually gets
fatigued in the legs after riding it for some five kilometers.
The vehicle is thus not ideal for longer
routes, they added.
“In my opinion, solowheels are suitable only
for strolls in shopping malls and parks, not on roads in
He added that in
Many are also put off by the exorbitant
prices.
Hoang Hoai Phuong, who lives in Cau Giay
District in
“It’s not easy to stop the solowheel
anywhere we want to. My roller skates cost only about VND1 million [$500],
and are considerably more mobile and portable than the solowheel,” he
explained.
Phuong added he would prefer bicycles when
it comes to working out.
Some of his friends are in a frenzy about
the solowheel, which they sometimes use for pleasure only.
Bui Duc Hung, a resident in District 12,
According to Colonel Tran Thanh Tra, head of
the Road-Railway Traffic Police Office under the Ho Chi Minh City Department
of Police, solowheel riders can be fined as unicycles are not listed as
permitted vehicles based on Article 3 of the Vietnamese Road Traffic Law,
which was issued in 2008.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
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Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 3, 2015
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