The family founded an import company in 1986, Matthews & Associates,
working with companies such as Bosch and Rotel. Invariably, when
people would visit the Matthewses, they would want to ride the
Solex and then would ask where they could get one. Tommie Matthews
decided to look into it.
"Anyone
who sees the Solex becomes an instant fan," he says. Solex is
not new technology. The tiny 49cc motor was patented in 1916,
and the first prototype bike was unveiled in 1940 in France at
the onset of the German occupation.
As
a bicycle it's heavy (62 pounds), but as a motorcycle it's light
as an inner tube. It has no gears (centrifugal clutch), and riding
it as a bike is reminiscent of two-wheelers of the 1940s and '50s.
Ah,
but they didn't have motors. The Solex motor sits in front of
the handlebars and is called into action by lowering it onto the
front tire where friction goes to work. It's fairly quiet as two-cycle
engines go (65db at full throttle) and will move the bike along
between 20-25 mph.
Although
it gets 200 mpg, the tiny fuel tank holds only 1.4 liters, about
a quarter gallon. According to Spencer, part of Solex's appeal
is that many states require no license to ride one since it's
classified as a bicycle (at 50cc it would become a moped). "We're
working with the Department of Motor Vehicles in Utah to get that
same kind of classification for Solex," he said.
If
they do, it could be a big boost to sales locally. The company's
also working to set up retailers, including bike dealers, moped
dealers, even RV dealers for people who want to hang one on the
back of their motor home.
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