- Roadster (bicycle)
A roadster is a type of heavy
utility bicycle once common in Britain and still very common inAsia andAfrica and similar to the styles still seen inGermany ,Denmark and theNetherlands - although Danish and Dutch bicycles tend to be distinctive, with (among other things) much higher handlebars and no rod brake (they tend to use acoaster brake or disc brakes instead).A classic roadster had a lugged brazed steel frame, rod brakes, flat handlebars, a single gear ratio or
Sturmey-Archer 3-speedhub gear s, achaincase , steel mudguards, cottered steel cranks, steel rims, and often aSturmey-Archer Dynohub hub dynamo . Major manufacturers in Britain were Raleigh, but BSA,Elswick Hopper and others also made them.In Britain this style of bicycle declined in popularity during the 1970s and 1980s, in company with cycling generally. When interest in cycling recovered in the 1990s, different styles of bicycle predominated, notably the
mountain bike . Although German and Dutch bikes are still imported into the UK, being relatively more common in Cambridge and Oxford, the closest modern equivalent is probably the hybrid. There is still one significant UK manufacturer of roadster cycles in the UK:Pashley Cycles still produce numerous models.The roadster bicycle is still, in many parts of the world, the standard bicycle. Manufactured in Asia (especially India, China and Taiwan) in mass production it is exported to African and Latin American developing countries. Because of its cheap price and its ability to carry heavy loads it is the most common bicycle in rural areas. The largest selling bike in history is the Chinese
Flying Pigeon , a single-speed roadster. Fact|date=October 2008In East-Africa the roadster is also called the "black mamba bicycle" and it is used as a taxi by the
boda-boda .ee also
*
boda-boda
*Road bicycle External links
* [http://web490.server-drome.net/bodaboda.html The Roadster Bicycle Taxis in Africa]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.