Tandem bicycle
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The tandem bicycle or twin is a form of bicycle (occasionally, a tricycle) designed to be powered by more than one person. Originally tandems were built by welding two bicycle frames together to form a two-person bicycle. Modern technology has improved component and frame designs, and many tandems are as well-built as modern high-end road and off-road bikes. Due to the additional stresses caused by multiple riders and higher weight, tandems typically require stronger components than ordinary bicycles.
Tandems are also available as tricycles; the conventional tandem trike has a small but devoted following in the United Kingdom, and is available in one-wheel and two-wheel drive designs. Recumbent tandem tricycles are also gaining popularity throughout the world.
Tandems can have more than 2 riders — tandem refers to the arrangement of the riders one behind the other rather than the number of riders. Bicycles for three, four, or five riders are referred to as "triples" or "triplets", "quads" or "quadruplets", and "quints" or "quintuplets" respectively. One such familiar to UK TV viewers was the "trandem" ridden by The Goodies, originally a 2-man tandem with an extra "dummy" seat attached, a full 3-man version was built for them by Raleigh. A famous ten-person bicycle or "decemtuplet", the "Oriten", was built in 1896 by the Orient Cycle Company. Perhaps the longest bicycle ever built was the Seventy four-seater built in 1984 in Queanbeyan, Australia.
Tandem bicycles are often used in competitions such as the Paralympics with blind and visually impaired cyclists riding as stokers with fully-sighted captains.
External links
- [The Tandem Club] — a U.K.-based club
- [The Tandem Club of America] — an originally U.S.-based, international club
- [Ten person bicycle (image of)] — View the picture of ten-person bicycle.
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