sdifox
No Lifer
- Sep 30, 2005
- 100,990
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Originally posted by: sdifox
http://super7cars.com/Super7_R-Type_Hayabusa.html
For those with the coins.
Originally posted by: mariok2006
Originally posted by: sdifox
http://super7cars.com/Super7_R-Type_Hayabusa.html
For those with the coins.
Ariel Atom and KTM xBOW would probably be more fun, also expensive than the caterham super 7.
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: mariok2006
Originally posted by: sdifox
http://super7cars.com/Super7_R-Type_Hayabusa.html
For those with the coins.
Ariel Atom and KTM xBOW would probably be more fun, also expensive than the caterham super 7.
Are those 2 street legal? If so, that could be interesting. I like the X-Bow![]()
But the sheer engineering required to make a motorcycle engine work in a car is what impressed me with the Super 7.
Originally posted by: zixxer
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: mariok2006
Originally posted by: sdifox
http://super7cars.com/Super7_R-Type_Hayabusa.html
For those with the coins.
Ariel Atom and KTM xBOW would probably be more fun, also expensive than the caterham super 7.
Are those 2 street legal? If so, that could be interesting. I like the X-Bow![]()
But the sheer engineering required to make a motorcycle engine work in a car is what impressed me with the Super 7.
It's really not that hard - most bikes that they're using for these things have no cat or emissions stuff AT ALL... It's really not much more than getting the chain 'round an axle rather than beside a wheel.
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: zixxer
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: mariok2006
Originally posted by: sdifox
http://super7cars.com/Super7_R-Type_Hayabusa.html
For those with the coins.
Ariel Atom and KTM xBOW would probably be more fun, also expensive than the caterham super 7.
Are those 2 street legal? If so, that could be interesting. I like the X-Bow![]()
But the sheer engineering required to make a motorcycle engine work in a car is what impressed me with the Super 7.
It's really not that hard - most bikes that they're using for these things have no cat or emissions stuff AT ALL... It's really not much more than getting the chain 'round an axle rather than beside a wheel.
That's the thing, to be street legal, it has to have a catalytic converter. Plus no reverse on bike and you have to have a reverse in a car.
Originally posted by: Apex
That's not quite true. Specialty Construct regulations vary from state to state, but most do not require a catalytic converter. The Atom, for instance, falls under this category.
Originally posted by: Demon-Xanth
In California, only 500 SCVs can be registered each year. That's not per company, that's TOTAL iirc.
Edit:
As far as how fast 500 get registered in California, from the DMV's website:
As of January 3, 2007,
all 500 sequence certificates have been assigned.
No additional sequence certificates will be available until January 2008
That's right, THREE DAYS for the first 500 to get the paperwork done.
