|
That looks like Braddock, Pa. Just no old beater oldsmobiles and buicks parked along the street. |
|
I've never used one, but extended family members have used them for years. From my observation, you have less chance of a rollover on the ones similar to the bottom one OP posted, but with the front wheels out on the front corners automobile-style and not centered together tricycle-style as pictured. I know that the ride-on styles are far more "off-road capable" in moving around on a lawn than any of the chair-styles and are not as rollover-prone as the chair-style as well.
More than once I've had to pick up someone in a power chair who went over forward when they dropped the front wheels into a low spot while travelling along a sidewalk or street. I don't ever recall seeing a ride-on style go over unless it was driven along an embankment and rolled. Usually they will work like a rear-engine riding lawn mower as far as rollover tendencies go. |
|
Quoted:
The wife and both turned 40 this year. I have been joking about getting a scooter so we can get around better. I'm going to have one under the tree this Christmas as a joke. Quoted:
Quoted:
This is definitely the place to ask. The wife and both turned 40 this year. I have been joking about getting a scooter so we can get around better. I'm going to have one under the tree this Christmas as a joke. We're both just a year or two ahead of you. This year we bought a brand new bed. I'm a tiny bit embarrassed to say that we made the purchase partly with future surgeries in mind. My joints aren't going to last forever, since I'm already running the equivalent of an orthopedic spare tire on one side. And that's how we came to own a Tempurpedic with the electric adjustable frame.
Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile |










