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{{Short description|Low-speed motorcycle}}
A '''scooter''' is a two-wheeled vehicle with a step-through frame in which the rider sits without straddling any part of the engine.
{{For|similar terms|Scooter (disambiguation)}}
{{Redirect|Motor scooter|the type of stand-up scooter|Motorized scooter}}
{{More citations needed|date=January 2018}}
[[File:Red scooter rider Avenida Do Mar, Funchal, Madeira Island.jpg|upright=1.14|thumb|The Italian [[Vespa]] was the first globally popular scooter ]]
[[File:TVS Scooty Streak.jpg|thumb|The term ''scooty'' has become the generic term for scooter in India<ref>{{Cite web |date=2011-07-17 |title=business.outlookindia.com {{!}} Women On Wheels |url=http://business.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?262141 |access-date=2022-05-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717152651/http://business.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?262141 |archive-date=2011-07-17 }}</ref>]]

A '''scooter''' ('''motor scooter''') is a [[motorcycle]] with an [[underbone]] or [[step-through frame]], a seat, a transmission that shifts without the operator having to operate a clutch lever, a platform for their feet, and with a method of operation that emphasizes comfort and [[fuel economy in automobiles|fuel economy]]. Elements of scooter design were present in some of the earliest motorcycles, and motor scooters have been made since at least 1914. More recently, scooters have evolved to include scooters exceeding 250cc classified as Maxi-scooters.
[[File:Autoped 1919 Ever Ready 1.jpg|thumb|1919 Autoped Scooter]]
The global popularity of motor scooters dates from the post-World War II introductions of the [[Vespa]] and [[Lambretta]] models in Italy. These scooters were intended to provide economical personal transportation ([[engine]]s from {{convert|50|to|150|cc|abbr=on|disp=or}}). The original layout is still widely used in this application. [[Scooter (motorcycle)#Maxi-scooter|Maxi-scooters]], with larger engines from {{convert|200|to|850|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} have been developed for Western markets.

Scooters are popular for personal transportation partly due to being more affordable, easier to operate, and more convenient to park and store than a car. Licensing requirements for scooters are easier and cheaper than for cars in most parts of the world, and insurance is usually cheaper. The term motor scooter is sometimes used to avoid confusion with [[kick scooter]], but can then be confused with [[motorized scooter]] or e-scooter, a kick-scooter with an electric motor.


== Description ==
== Description ==
The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines a motor scooter as a motorcycle similar to a [[kick scooter]] with a seat, a floorboard, and small or low wheels.<ref name=ScooterDefinition/> The [[United States Department of Transportation|US Department of Transportation]] defines a scooter as a motorcycle that has a platform for the operator's feet or has integrated footrests and has a step-through architecture.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rules-regulations/administration/fmcsr/fmcsrruletext.asp?section=571.123 |title=DOT Regulation Part 571.123: Standard No. 123; Motorcycle controls and displays. |publisher=Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration |access-date=2010-06-03 |archive-date=2009-01-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090126055757/http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rules-regulations/administration/fmcsr/fmcsrruletext.asp?section=571.123 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
{{worldview}}
The classic scooter design features a step-thru frame and a flat floorboard for the rider's feet. This design is possible because the scooter engine is either attached to the rear axle or under the seat with a [[continuously variable transmission]] transferring power to the rear wheel. In contrast to a frame mounted [[motorcycle]] engine, this front-hinged arrangement allows the rear of the engine to swing vertically in conjunction with the motion of the rear wheel. Older [[Vespa]]s, most vintage scooters, and some newer retro models have axle mounted engines with a manual transmission with the gear shift and clutch controls built into the left handlebar.
[[Image:honda_nh80.jpg|250px|thumb|A typical mid-1980s "twist and go" scooter.]]
In contrast to most motorcycles, scooters generally feature bodywork, including a front leg shield and body that conceals all or most of the mechanicals. There is often some integral storage space, either under the seat, built into the front leg shield, or both. Most modern motor scooters have smaller wheels than motorcycles, between eight and 12 inches (20-28 cm) in diameter (though maxi- and big-wheel scooters may have larger wheels). Most scooters have smaller engines than motorcycles (between 30 [[cubic centimetre|cc]] and 250 cc with a single cylinder, though some models have twin cylinder motors). Most jurisdictions have no legal definition for "scooter". In general, 50 cc and under scooters are classified in most states and countries as a [[moped]] and are subject to reduced safety restrictions and licensing fees. Scooters above 50 cc are generally legally considered [[motorcycle]]s, though some states have an in-between definition for motorized bike for scooters and motorcycles between 50 and 150 cc.


The classic scooter design features a step-through frame and a flat floorboard for the rider's feet.{{cn|date=September 2023}} This design is possible because most scooter engines and drive systems are attached to the rear axle or under the seat. Unlike a conventional motorcycle, in which the engine is mounted on the frame, most modern scooters allow the engine to swing with the rear wheel, while most vintage scooters and some newer [[retro]] models have an axle-mounted engine. Modern scooters starting from the late-1980s generally use a [[continuously variable transmission]] (CVT), while older ones use a manual transmission with the [[Semi-automatic transmission|gearshift and clutch control built into the left handlebar]].
Until recently, most modern motor scooters came with air cooled [[two-stroke cycle]] engines with automatic two-stroke oil injection although some of the higher spec small ones and large ones are water cooled such as the [[Honda]] [[Honda FC50|FC50]] or the 2002 [[Yamaha Motor Company|Yamaha]] YQ50s. Scooters increasingly have [[Four-stroke cycle|four-stroke]] engines to meet stricter emissions controls. Trends world-wide have seen new variations on the classic scooter. A common variation, the 'big-wheel' or commuter-style scooter features wheels as large as a motorcycle. Popular models of the commuter-style bike include the [[Aprilia]] Scarabeo models, the [[Piaggio]] Liberty/LT models, and the [[Taiwan]]ese [[Kymco]] People models.


Scooters usually feature bodywork, including a front leg shield and body that conceals all or most of the mechanicals. There is often some integral storage space, either under the seat, built into the front leg shield, or both. Scooters have varying engine displacements and configurations ranging from {{cvt|50|cc|cuin}} single-cylinder to {{cvt|850|cc|cuin}} twin-cylinder models.
High-end scooter models now include comprehensive technological features including cast aluminum frames, engines with integral counter-balancing, and cross-linked brake systems. Some of these modern high-end scooters also come with comfort features such as windshields, heated hand grips and full instrumentation (including clock or outside temperature gauge.)


Traditionally, scooter wheels are smaller than conventional motorcycle wheels and are made of pressed steel or cast aluminum alloy, bolt on easily, and often are interchangeable between front and rear. Some scooters carry a [[spare wheel]]. Many recent scooters use conventional [[Motorcycle fork|front forks]] with the front axle fastened at both ends.
High-powered electric road scooters are on the horizon now that small electric motorcycles like the [http://www.e-max-scooter.com/index.php?spr=en e-max] and the [http://www.egovehicles.com/ eGO] have been released.


== Regulatory classification ==
In an effort to reduce emissions, there are now [[LPG powered scooters]] that run on [[Liquefied petroleum gas|LPG]] rather than petrol or diesel.

Some jurisdictions do not differentiate between scooters and motorcycles. Though some jurisdictions classify smaller engine scooters (typically {{cvt|50|cc|cuin|disp=or}} maximum) as moped class vehicles rather than motorcycles, meaning these scooters often have less stringent regulations (for example, 50 cc scooters can be driven with a normal car drivers license - or by adults aged 18+ years without any license (other than a valid liability insurance) at all as in case of at least Denmark - in many jurisdictions, and might pay less road-tax and be subject to less stringent roadworthiness testing).

===United States===
For all legal purposes in the United States of America, the [[National Highway Traffic Safety Administration]] (NHTSA) recommends using the term motorcycle for all of these vehicles. However, while NHTSA excludes the term ''motor scooter'' from legal definition, it proceeds, in the same document, to give detailed instructions on how to import a small motor scooter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/cars/rules/import/FAQ%20Site/pages/page3.html#Anchor-52644 |title=Importation and Certification FAQ's Directory-Motorcycles and Scooters |publisher=Nhtsa.dot.gov |access-date=2009-04-27}}</ref>

====California====
{{As of|2020}} the US state of California has a regulatory system for 2- and 3-wheeled vehicles. It classifies vehicles with fewer than four wheels into the following categories:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.myronsmopeds.com/category/california-vehicle-codes/|title=California Vehicle Codes|work=Myron's Mopeds}}</ref>
* Motorcycle: a motorcycle is any 2- or 3-wheeled gas operated vehicle weighing under 1,500&nbsp;lbs. with an engine displacement greater than or equal to 150ccs. Operation requires an M1 class license, and such vehicles must be registered with the state and carry mandatory insurance as well as bear a motorcycle license plate. Motorcycles may travel on any public roadway, including freeways, and may carry a single passenger in addition to the driver. Helmets are mandatory.
* Motor-driven cycle: a motor-driven cycle is 2-wheeled gas operated vehicle with an engine displacement of 149ccs or less that does not qualify as a moped (see below) and is capable of traveling greater than 30&nbsp;mph. It has the same licensing, registration, insurance, license plating, and helmet requirements as a motorcycle, though it may not travel on freeways. Such vehicles are commonly referred to as "scooters".
* Moped: a moped (or "motorized bicycle") is a 2- or 3-wheeled device with an automatic transmission capable of traveling no more than 30&nbsp;mph, with either a gas engine displacement of less than 50ccs (i.e., 49ccs or less) ''with'' built-in pedals like a bicycle for human operation, OR, if powered only by electricity, it must not produce more than four gross [[brake horsepower]] (bicycle pedals are optional for electric mopeds). There are no registration or insurance requirements for the device, but the operator themself must have an M1 or M2 class license and must personally carry the minimum state automobile insurance and the moped itself must bear a special moped license plate. A single passenger is permitted if the vehicle is fitted with a specific seat and footrests for same.
*Motorized tricycle/quadricycle: a motorized tricycle or quadricycle is a 3- or 4-wheeled vehicle propelled by a gas motor not capable of traveling greater than 30&nbsp;mph and with a gross brake horsepower of 2 or less.
* Motorized scooter: a motorized scooter is a 2-wheeled vehicle not capable of traveling greater than 15&nbsp;mph with a floorboard designed to be stood upon while operating. They do not require a license plate or insurance, and may not be driven on a roadway with a posted speed limit greater than 25&nbsp;mph. A valid class C driver license is required, as is a bicycle helmet. Passengers are prohibited. They may be operated on a bikepath or bikeway but not on a sidewalk. If a given roadway has a bicycle lane, the motorized scooter must travel within it, and can only make a left-hand turn by dismounting and crossing an intersection as a pedestrian.
* [[Electric bicycle]]: California recognizes three classes of electric bicycles. A class 1 electric bicycle is a bicycle with pedals whose electric motor only assists the rider when using the pedals and stops assisting when the bicycle reaches 20&nbsp;mph; a class 2 electric bicycle is a bicycle with pedals whose motor can drive the bicycle entirely on its own, but will not assist the rider above 20&nbsp;mph; a class 3 electric bicycle is identical to a class 1 electric bicycle, but is capable of traveling up 28&nbsp;mph before the engine stops assisting the rider AND is equipped with a speedometer. No electric bicycle requires insurance, a license, or any form of registration or license plate as it is not considered a "motor vehicle" by the state.

== Emissions ==
{{See also|Fuel gas-powered scooter}}
The [[vehicle emissions control|emissions]] of [[moped]]s and scooters have been the subject of multiple studies. Studies have found that [[two-stroke engine|two-stroke]] 50&nbsp;[[Cubic centimetre|cc]] mopeds, with and without catalytic converters, emit ten to thirty times more hydrocarbons and particulate emissions than the outdated [[European emission standards|Euro 3]] automobile standards.<ref name="eri.ucr.edu">{{cite web|url=http://www.eri.ucr.edu/ISAFXVCD/ISAFXVAF/EmMPFAM.pdf|work=Schramm et al.|title=Emissions from a Moped Fuelled by Gasoline/Ethanol Mixtures|access-date=2010-07-18}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|journal=Environmental Science & Technology|volume=44|issue=1|pages=505–512|title=Chemical characterization of emissions from modern two-stroke mopeds complying with legislative regulation in Europe (EURO-2)|doi=10.1021/es9021969|pmid=19928903|year = 2010|last1 = Adam|first1 = T.|last2=Farfaletti|first2=A.|last3=Montero|first3=L.|last4=Martini|first4=G.|last5=Manfredi|first5=U.|last6=Larsen|first6=B.|last7=Santi|first7=G. De|last8=Krasenbrink|first8=A.|last9=Astorga|first9=C.|bibcode=2010EnST...44..505A}}</ref> In the same study, [[four-stroke engine|four-stroke]] mopeds, with and without catalytic converters, emitted three to eight times more hydrocarbons and particulate emissions than the Euro 3 automobile standards.<ref name="eri.ucr.edu"/> Approximate parity with automobiles was achieved with NOx emissions in these studies. Emissions performance was tested on a g/km basis and was unaffected by fuel economy. {{As of|2011|alt=In 2011}} the [[United States Environmental Protection Agency]] allowed motorcycles, scooters, and mopeds with engine displacements less than 280&nbsp;cc to emit ten times the NOx and six times the CO than the median Tier II bin 5 automobile regulations.<ref>{{cite web |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121026142451/http://www.epa.gov/oms/regs/roadbike/1-hmc-regs-pres.pdf |archive-date = October 26, 2012 |url=http://www.epa.gov/oms/regs/roadbike/1-hmc-regs-pres.pdf |title=Highway Motorcycles: EPA Regulations and Global Activity Update|access-date=2011-06-10|date = 2016-08-16 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.edmunds.com/car-technology/untangling-us-vehicle-emissions-regulations-pg2.html|work=Jason Kavanagh|title=Untangling US Vehicle Emissions Regulations|access-date=2011-06-10}}</ref> An additional air quality challenge can also arise from the use of moped and scooter transportation over automobiles, as a higher density of two-wheeled vehicles can be supported by existing transportation infrastructure.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iea-amf.vtt.fi/pdf/annex33_B249_4annexes_v1.pdf|work=IEA|title=2 Stroke Scooters International Projects Network|access-date=2010-07-18|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720194322/https://www.iea-amf.vtt.fi/pdf/annex33_B249_4annexes_v1.pdf|archive-date=2011-07-20 }}</ref>

In Genoa, 2-stroke engine scooters made before 1999 are banned since 2019.<ref>[https://www.thelocal.it/20190904/anti-vespa-law-in-italian-birthplace-of-the-iconic-scooter 'Anti-Vespa' law announced in Italian birthplace of the iconic scooter]</ref>

In some cities, such as [[Shanghai]], [[petrol]] scooters/mopeds are banned and only LPG or electric scooters are allowed to be used in the city due to [[air pollution]].<ref name=AP2008>{{Citation |title= Shanghai hikes LPG price, aiming to counter shortages |location= Shanghai |author= [[Associated Press]] |newspaper= [[The Hindu]] |date= 16 June 2008 |url= http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200806161658.htm |access-date= 2011-04-12 }}</ref><ref name=CaoLi2004>{{Citation |title= Shanghai phasing out old mopeds from streets |author= Cao Li |newspaper= [[China Daily]] (North American ed.). |location= New York, NY |date= 30 November 2004 |page= 3 }}</ref>


== History ==
== History ==

[[Image:Motorroller 01 KMJ.jpg|right|220px|thumb|A Vespa]]
===Predecessors===
Scooters trace their ancestry back to the [[United States|USA]], where [[Cushman]] and Salsbury created some of the first motorized two wheelers with the traits that have come to embody scooters. Salsbury produced the first automatic scooter with a [[Continuously Variable Transmission]] (CVT). Cushman's light, compact, and rugged scooters were used by the United States military as ground vehicles for [[paratrooper]]s during [[World War II]]. The Vespa, originally manufactured by Piaggio in post-WWII [[Italy]], quickly popularized motor scooters in places where inexpensive transportation was in dire need. Constructed using aircraft design and materials it redefined the vehicle type for 35 years. Despite Vespa's dominance of the scooter market, they were not without competition. [[Lambretta (motorscooter)|Lambretta]] offered models that rivaled those in the Vespa product line. In the 1980s new versions of scooters began to be released and become popular, especially in [[Japan]] and Far-[[East Asia]]. This styling of scooters began to reflect that of larger, sporty, higher-performance motorcycles of the time and the trend has continued to the current day. With the release of the [[Honda Ruckus]], new trends towards dirt-bike scooters are just beginning. The classic styling of the Vespa has never lost its popularity, however and remains the most popular and most imitated scooter design. Almost all manufacturers now carry both a classic/retro model and a sporty/modern model.

Scooter-like traits began to develop in motorcycle designs around the 1900s. In 1894, [[Hildebrand & Wolfmüller]] in [[Munich]], Germany produced the first motorcycle that was available for purchase. Their motorcycle had a step-through frame, with its fuel tank mounted on the down tube, its parallel two-cylinder engine mounted low on the frame, and its cylinders mounted in line with the frame. It was water-cooled and had a [[radiator (engine cooling)|radiator]] built into the top of the rear fender. It became the first mass-produced and publicly sold powered two-wheel vehicle, and among the first powered mainly by its engine rather than foot pedals. Maximum speed was {{convert|40|kph|abbr=on}}. The rear wheel was driven directly by rods from the pistons in a manner similar to the drive wheels of [[steam locomotive]]s. Only a few hundred such bikes were built, and the high price and technical difficulties made the venture a financial failure for both Wolfmüller and his financial backer, Hildebrand.<ref name="WoM_HuW">{{cite web|url=http://www.khulsey.com/motorcycles/vintage_motorcycle_hildebrand_wolfmueller.html|title=The World of Motorcycles: Vintage Motorcycles - Hildebrand & Wolfmüller|publisher=Kevin Hulsey Illustration, Inc.|website=theworldofmotorcycles.com|access-date=2009-05-17}}</ref>

In France, the [[Auto-Fauteuil]] was introduced in 1902. This was basically a step-through motorcycle with an [[Fauteuil|armchair]] instead of a traditional saddle. Production continued until 1922.<ref name="ScooterManiacAutoFauteuil">{{cite web|url=http://www.scootermaniac.org/index.php?op=modele&cle=171|title=ScooterManiac - Auto-Fauteuil|publisher=Florian JACQUET, webmaster|website=scootermaniac.org|access-date=2010-08-28}}</ref>
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Predecessors to the scooter">
ZweiRadMuseumNSU Hildebrand Wolfmueller.JPG|alt=The first production motorcycle, the Hildebrand & Wolfmüller had a step-through frame|1894 [[Hildebrand & Wolfmüller]] motorcycle
Autofauteuil 490 cc side valve 1908.jpg|alt=This was a step-through motorcycle with an armchair instead of a saddle|1908 French Auto-Fauteuil motorcycle
</gallery>

=== First generation (1915–1930) ===

The [[motoped]] entered production in 1915, and is believed to be the first motor scooter.<ref name="RedEyes13">{{cite book|first1=Colin |last1=Shattuck |first2=Eric |last2=Peterson |title=Scooters: Red Eyes, Whitewalls and Blue Smoke|year=2005|publisher=Speck Press|isbn=0-9725776-3-7|page=13|chapter= Chapter 1: The Evolution of a Revolution |quote=The American Motoped, first produced in 1915, was a sign of motorscooters to come. The Motoped, unlike the motorcycle-like French [[Monet-Goyon]] that actually pre-dated it, was based around the very same concept as kids' push scooters, only a small displacement engine over the front wheel replaced the pushing action of the foot.}}</ref> They were followed that year by the [[Autoped]], whose engine was engaged by pushing the handlebar column forward and whose brake was engaged by pulling the column back.<ref name=EncycloMoto22>{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/22 22]|chapter=The A-Z of Motorcycles}}</ref> Autopeds were made in [[Long Island]], [[New York (state)|New York]]<ref name="AmOnTheMove">{{cite web|url=http://americanhistory.si.edu/onthemove/themes/story_54_2.html|title=America On The Move - Pope, Cleveland, Autoped, and Simplex|work=americanhistory.si.edu/onthemove|access-date=2009-05-17}}</ref> from 1915 to 1921,<ref name=EncycloMoto22 /> and were also made under license by [[Krupp]] in Germany from 1919 to 1922, following [[World War I]].<ref name=EncycloMoto243>{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/243 243]|chapter=The Directory of Motorcycles}}</ref>

The number of scooter manufacturers and designs increased after World War I. The British - [[ABC motorcycles#ABC Scootamota|ABC Motors Skootamota]], the [[Kenilworth]], and the [[Reynolds Runabout]] debuted in 1919, with [[Gloster Aircraft Company|Gloucestershire Aircraft Company]] following with its Unibus in 1920.<ref name=EncycloMoto1919_20>{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|pages=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/170 170] (Skootamota), 222 (Kenilworth), 159, 228 (Reynolds Runabout), 231 (Unibus)}}</ref> The Skootamota was noted for being practical, popular, and economical,<ref name="MotorScootersMikeWebster">{{cite book|last=Webster|first=Michael|title=Motor Scooters|edition=2|series=Shire Album Series, volume 181|orig-year=1986|year=2008|publisher=Shire Books|isbn=978-0-7478-0668-4|pages=6–7|chapter=The early years|quote= At £99 15s the Unibus was too expensive and, whilst it deserved to succeed, it was too far ahead of its time to be appreciated fully. The general public had also become extremely wary about scooters as more than a dozen models had been rushed on to the market since 1918 and many of these were crude, uncomfortable and difficult to handle. }}</ref> the Kenilworth for its electric lights,<ref>{{cite web|last1=Jones|first1=Jason|title=Evolution of the Electric Motor Scooter|url=http://scooterscouter.com/evolution-of-the-electric-motor-scooter/|website=Scooter Scouter|date=31 October 2015|publisher=Scooter|access-date=December 20, 2015}}</ref> and the Reynolds Runabout for its advanced specifications, including front suspension, a two-speed gearbox, leg shields, and a seat sprung with leaf springs and coil springs.<ref name=EncycloMoto159>{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/159 159]|chapter=The A-Z of Motorcycles}}</ref> The Unibus also had a two-speed gearbox, but it is more notable for its full bodywork, similar to that which would appear of second- and third-generation scooters.<ref name="MotorScootersMikeWebster" /><ref name="ScooterManiacUnibus">{{cite web|url=http://www.scootermaniac.org/index.php?op=modele&cle=584|title=ScooterManiac - Gloucester Aircraft Co. Unibus|publisher=Florian JACQUET, webmaster|website=scootermaniac.org|access-date=2010-08-28}}</ref>

The reputation of first-generation scooters was damaged by a glut of unstable machines with flexible frames,<ref name="MotorScootersMikeWebster" /><ref name="ClassicMotorcyclesSkootamota">{{cite book|last=Gary|first=Johnstone|title=Classic Motorcycles|orig-year=1993|year=1995|publisher=Tiger Books International|location=Twickenham, U.K.|isbn=1-85501-731-8|page=78|chapter=Scooter Mania|quote=But the technology of the time could not create a sufficiently strong structure that would resist torsional stress, so the machines were difficult to handle. Such machines were seen by "purists" as playthings, an adjunct to mainstream motorcycles. The bigotry persisted even if the scooters did not. }}</ref> and more substantial examples like the Reynolds Runabout and the Unibus were too expensive to be competitive.<ref name="MotorScootersMikeWebster" /><ref name=EncycloMoto159 /> The first generation had ended by the mid-1920s.<ref name="MotorScootersMikeWebster" />
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="First generation scooters, 1915–1930">
Autoped 1919 Ever Ready 1.jpg|alt=The [[Autoped]] was one of the first powered scooters|1919 [[Autoped]] Ever Ready
ABC Scootamota 2.jpg|alt=The Skootamota was a more refined scooter than the Autoped|[[ABC motorcycles|ABC]] Skootamota, designed by [[Granville Bradshaw]]
Kenilworth scooter 1921.jpg|alt=Another 1st generation British scooter, the Kenilworth|1921 Kenilworth scooter
Scooters.Assisi013.jpg|alt=Gloucestershire Aircraft Company's Unibus was ahead of its time, but was too expensive to survive|1920s Unibus scooter, in grey, at right.
MHV DKW Lomos 01.jpg|alt=The Lomos was DKW's second motorcycle; the first was the Golem, an auto-fauteuil|DKW Lomos, a cross between a scooter and an auto-fauteuil
</gallery>

===Second generation (1936–1968)===
E. Foster Salsbury and Austin Elmore developed the Salsbury Motor Glide, which was a division of [[Northrop Aircraft]],<ref>{{cite web|title=Salisbury Manual Archive|url=http://www.salsburyscooters.com/manuals.html|website=Salisbury Scooters|access-date=10 April 2017}}</ref> a scooter with a seat above an enclosed drivetrain, and began production in 1936 in California. In 1938, Salsbury introduced a more powerful scooter with a [[continuously variable transmission]] (CVT). This was the first use of a CVT on a scooter.<ref name="ScootersRedWhiteBlue">{{cite book|first1= Colin|last1=Shattuck|first2= Eric|last2=Peterson|others=Foreword by Michael and Eric Dregni|title=Scooters: Red Eyes, Whitewalls and Blue Smoke|year=2005|publisher=Speck Press|isbn=0-9725776-3-7|pages=14–16|chapter=Chapter 1: The Evolution of a Revolution|quote=And the CVT's legacy lives on. Almost every new scooter built today uses Salsbury's basic design. }}</ref> It was such a success that Salsbury attempted to license the design to several European manufacturers including Piaggio. The Motor Glide set the standards for all later models. It inspired production of motor scooters by [[Powell Manufacturing Company|Powell]], Moto-scoot, Cushman, Rock-Ola, and others.<ref name=CulturalHistory>{{cite web|author=Mary Anne Long|title=From Scooter to Scooterist: A Cultural History of the Italian Motorscooter|url=http://www.vespaclubvolos.com/Scooter_History_1_.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717194516/http://www.vespaclubvolos.com/Scooter_History_1_.pdf|date=1998-12-17|archive-date=2011-07-17|url-status=dead|access-date=2010-08-28 }}</ref>

The [[Cushman (company)|Cushman Company]] produced motor scooters from 1936 to 1965.<ref name=EncycloMoto269>{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/269 269]|chapter=The Directory of Motorcycles}}</ref> Cushman was an engine manufacturer that started making scooters after Salsbury found their offer to supply engines to be unacceptable. Cushman and Salsbury competed against each other, with both companies advertising the economy of their scooters. Cushman claimed an efficiency of {{convert|120|mpgus|abbr=on}} at {{convert|30|mph|abbr=on}}. Cushman introduced a centrifugal clutch to their scooters in 1940.<ref name="ScootersRedWhiteBlue" /> The Cushman Auto Glide Model 53 was designed to be dropped by parachute with Army Airborne troops, and was eventually called the "Cushman Airborne".<ref name=OliveDrabCushma53 >{{cite web |url= http://www.olive-drab.com/idphoto/id_photos_cushman_53.php |title= Olive-Drab: Cushman Model 53 Airborne Scooter (G-683) |publisher= Olive-Drab.com LLC |access-date= 2010-02-19 }}</ref> Cushman scooters were also used around military bases for messenger service.<ref name=1942MDL32 >{{cite web |url= http://www.gasenginemagazine.com/company-history/cushman-military-scooters.aspx |title= Cushman Military Scooters |first= Larry |last= Powell |date=August–September 1995 |work= Gas Engine Magazine |publisher= Ogden Publications |location= Topeka, Kansas |page= 1 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140221074037/http://www.gasenginemagazine.com/company-history/cushman-military-scooters.aspx|archive-date= 2014-02-21|url-status= live|access-date= 2014-02-20 }}</ref>

Salsbury continued manufacturing scooters until 1948,<ref name=EncycloMoto165>{{cite book |last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995 |publisher=Dorling Kindersley |location=London |isbn=0-7513-0206-6 |page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/165 165] |chapter=The A-Z of Motorcycles}}</ref> while Cushman continued until 1965.<ref name=EncycloMoto44>{{cite book |last=Wilson|first=Hugo |title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6 |page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/44 44]|chapter=The A-Z of Motorcycles}}</ref>

Small numbers of the {{convert|165|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} [[Harley-Davidson Topper]] scooter were produced from 1960 to 1965 using the engine from [[Harley-Davidson Hummer|their line of light motorcycles]] based on the [[DKW RT 125]]. It had a [[fiberglass]] body, a [[continuously variable transmission]], and a [[pull-cord]] starting mechanism.<ref name="HowStuffWorks" >{{cite web|author=<!--not stated-->|url=http://auto.howstuffworks.com/1963-harley-davidson-topper.htm |title=How Stuff Works: 1963 Harley-Davidson Topper |publisher=[[HowStuffWorks]] |date=2007-09-18 |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref><ref name=HallOfFameTopper >{{cite web|url=http://www.motorcyclemuseum.org/classics/bike.asp?id=83 |title=AMA's Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum: 1960 Harley-Davidson Topper |publisher=Motorcyclemuseum.org |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref>

<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Second generation scooters, United States, 1936–1965">
1956 Allstate Scooter 2.jpg|alt=Sears Allstate scooter, made by Cushman|Typical Cushman scooter, this one sold by [[Sears]] under the [[Allstate vehicles|Allstate]] brand
Scooters.Assisi002.jpg|alt=The Model 85 was much bigger and sleeker than the early Motor Glides|1948 Salsbury Model 85 scooter (middle)
1948_Moto-Scoot_145.jpg|1948 Moto-Scoot 145 manufactured in Chicago<ref>http://nzclassicmotorcycles.webdog.me/collection/1948-motoscoot-145/ {{Dead link|date=March 2022}}</ref>
</gallery>

====Early postwar Japan====

After World War II, wartime [[aircraft]] manufacturers were forbidden from making aircraft, and had to find other products to make in order to stay in business. Fuji Sangyo, a part of the former [[Nakajima Aircraft Company]], began production of the [[Fuji Rabbit]] S-1 scooter in June 1946. Inspired by [[Powell Manufacturing Company|Powell]] scooters used by American servicemen, the S1 was designed to use surplus military parts, including the tailwheel of a Nakajima bomber, re-purposed as the front wheel of the S1.<ref name="FujiRabbitDotComHistory">{{cite web|url=http://www.fujirabbit.com/pages/frame_history.html|title=Fuji Rabbit Scooters - History|url-status=dead |website=fujirabbit.com |access-date=2010-09-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211004722/http://www.fujirabbit.com/pages/frame_history.html|archive-date=2008-12-11 }}</ref><ref name="FujiRabbitMicroMuseum">{{cite web|url=http://microcarmuseum.com/tour/fujirabbit.html|title=The Bruce Weiner Microcar Museum - 1968 Fuji Rabbit|year=2002|location=Madison, GA, USA|work=microcarmuseum.com|access-date=2010-09-01}}</ref> Later that year, [[Mitsubishi]] introduced the C10, the first of its line of [[Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon|Silver Pigeon]] scooters.<ref name="MitsuMuseumC10">{{cite web|url=http://www.mitsubishi-motors.com/corporate/museum/autogallery/e/history/pigeon_c10.html|title=Mitsubishi Motors Silver Pigeon C10 - 1946|year=2003|url-status=dead|website=mitsubishi-motors.com|access-date=2010-09-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111105224715/http://www.mitsubishi-motors.com/corporate/museum/autogallery/e/history/pigeon_c10.html|archive-date=2011-11-05 }}</ref><ref name="240LandmarksSilverPigeon">{{cite web|url=http://www.jsae.or.jp/autotech/data_e/4-6e.html|title=240 Landmarks of Japanese Automotive Technology - Silver Pigeon (Motor Scooter)|publisher=Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan, Inc.|website=jsae.or.jp/autotech|access-date=2010-09-01}}</ref> This was inspired by a Salsbury Motor Glide that had been brought to Japan by a Japanese man who had lived in the United States.<ref name="240LandmarksSilverPigeon" />

Production of the Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon and the Fuji Rabbit continued through several series until the 1960s.<ref name="FujiRabbitDotComHistory" /><ref name="MitsuMuseumC140">{{cite web|url=http://www.mitsubishi-motors.com/corporate/museum/autogallery/e/history/pigeon_c140.html|title=Mitsubishi Motors Silver Pigeon C140 - 1964|year=2003|website=mitsubishi-motors.com|access-date=2010-09-01|archive-date=2011-11-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111105224653/http://www.mitsubishi-motors.com/corporate/museum/autogallery/e/history/pigeon_c140.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> Some series of the Fuji Rabbit were developed to a high level of technological content; the S-601 Rabbit Superflow had an automatic transmission with a torque converter, an electric starter, and pneumatic suspension.<ref name="FujiRabbitDotComIntro">{{cite web|url=http://www.fujirabbit.com/pages/frame_history.html|title=Fuji Rabbit Scooters - Introduction|url-status=dead|work=fujirabbit.com|access-date=2010-09-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211004722/http://www.fujirabbit.com/pages/frame_history.html|archive-date=2008-12-11 }}</ref><ref name="FRdcTorConOil">{{cite web|url=http://www.fujirabbit.com/pages/Tech_fluids.html|title=Fuji Rabbit Scooters - Tech - Fluids|website=fujirabbit.com|access-date=2010-09-01}}</ref> Mitsubishi ended scooter production with the C140 Silver Pigeon,<ref name="MitsuMuseumC140" /> while Fuji continued production of the Rabbit until the last of the S-211 series was built in June 1968.<ref name="FujiRabbitDotComHistory" />
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Second generation scooters, Japan, 1946–1968">
Fuji Touring 150 - Side View.jpg|alt=S-402: Fuji Rabbit Touring 150|Fuji Rabbit Touring 150 (S-402)
Mitsubishi_Silver_Pigeon.jpg|[[Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon]]
</gallery>

===Third generation (1946–1964) and beyond===

====Italy - Vespa and Lambretta====
[[File:Lambretta 125 D 1952 a.jpg|thumb|upright|1952 Lambretta 125 D]]

In post-World War II Italy the [[Piaggio]] [[Vespa]] became the standard for scooters, and has remained so for over 60 years.<ref>{{cite news|access-date=22 April 2022|title=La dolce vita, all over again|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna7762195|website=nbcnews.com}}</ref> Patented in April 1946, it used aircraft design and materials. D'Ascanio's {{convert|98|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} scooter had various new design concepts, including a stress-bearing structure. The [[gear shift]] lever was moved to the handlebars for easier riding. The engine was placed near the rear wheel, eliminating the [[belt drive]]. The typical fork support was replaced by an arm similar to an aircraft carriage for easier tire-changing. The body design protected the driver from wind and road dirt. The smaller wheels and shorter wheelbase provide improved maneuverability through narrow streets and congested traffic. The name originated when Piaggio's president, upon seeing the prototype, remarked ''"Sembra una vespa"'', "It looks like a wasp".{{citation needed|date=May 2015}}

Months after the Vespa, in 1947, [[Innocenti]] introduced the [[Lambretta (motorscooter)|Lambretta]], beginning a rivalry with Vespa. The scooter was designed by Innocenti, his General Director Giuseppe Lauro and engineer Pierluigi Torre. The Lambretta was named after Lambrate, the Milanese neighborhood where the factory stood.<ref name="MilansinceMiracle">{{cite book |last1= Foot |first1=John|title= Milan since the Miracle: City, Culture and Identity|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YzdRxQwiK6sC |access-date=2012-10-14 |date=2001-10-01 |publisher=Berg |isbn=1-85973-550-9 |page=120 |chapter= 6: Capital of Design, Capital of Fashion|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YzdRxQwiK6sC&pg=PA109 |quote=Milan's scooter was the Lambretta, produced in the vast Innocenti complex in Lambrate, to the east of the city (hence the name) using Fordist production techniques (100 scooters a day were being produced by 1948, although the first models were made without a production line).}}</ref> It debuted in 1947 at the Paris Motor Show. The Lambretta 'A' went on sale on December 23, 1947, and sold 9,000 units in one year. It was efficient, at a time when fuel was severely rationed. It had a top speed of {{convert|45|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on}} from a fan-cooled engine of {{convert|123|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}. The first Lambretta designs had shaft drive and no rear suspension, later designs used various drive and suspension systems until Lambretta settled on a swingarm-mounted engine with chain drive.<ref name=ClassicMoto79 >{{cite book |title=Classic Motorcycles |last=Johnstone |first=Gary |year=1993 |publisher=Tiger Books International |isbn=1-85501-731-8 |page=79}}</ref>

Also other Italian firms manufactured scooters in 1950s and 1960s, like [[Italjet]] and [[Iso (automobile)|Iso]].

====Germany====

Germany's aviation industry was also dismantled after World War II. [[Heinkel]] stayed in business by making bicycles and mopeds,<ref name="CoF_Heinkel">{{cite web|url=http://www.centennialofflight.gov/essay/Aerospace/Heinkel/Aero57.htm|title=U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission - Heinkel Aircraft Works|last=Heppenheimer|first=T.A.|publisher=U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission|url-status=dead|quote="After the war, Germany again saw its aviation industry dismantled. Heinkel kept his company in business by building bicycles and motorbikes."|website=centennialofflight.gov|access-date=2010-10-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101006084403/http://centennialofflight.gov/essay/Aerospace/Heinkel/Aero57.htm|archive-date=2010-10-06 }}</ref> while [[Messerschmitt]] made sewing machines and automobile parts.<ref name="IstDasNicht163">{{Cite journal | last = Wagner | first = Carl | editor-last = Vorderman | editor-first = Don | date = 1973 | title = "Ist das nicht ein Kabinenroller?" "Ja! das ist ein Kabinenroller!" Carl Wagner takes off on Messerschmitt | journal = Automobile Quarterly | volume = 11 | issue = 2 – Second Quarter | page = 163 | location = New York| lccn = 62004005 }}</ref> Messerschmitt took over the German license to manufacture Vespa scooters from [[Hoffmann (motorcycle)|Hoffman]] in 1954 and built Vespas under from 1954 to 1964.<ref name="EncycloMoto244">{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/244 244]|chapter=The Directory of Motorcycles }}</ref> Heinkel designed and built its own scooters. The [[Heinkel Tourist]] was a large and relatively heavy touring scooter produced in the 1960s. It provided good weather protection with a full fairing, and the front wheel turned under a fixed nose extension. It had effective streamlining, perhaps thanks to its aircraft ancestry. Although it had only a {{convert|175|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} four stroke motor, it could sustain speeds of {{convert|70|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on}}. Heinkel scooters were known for their reliability.{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}}

[[Glas (company)#Scooters|Glas]], a manufacturer of agricultural machinery, made the Goggo scooter from 1951 to 1955. Glas discontinued scooter production to concentrate on its [[Goggomobil]] [[microcar]].<ref name="EncycloMoto239">{{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Hugo|title=The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1|url-access=registration|year=1995|publisher=Dorling Kindersley|location=London|isbn=0-7513-0206-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmo00wils_1/page/239 239]|chapter=The Directory of Motorcycles }}</ref>

Several manufacturers in the German motorcycle industry made scooters. [[NSU Motorenwerke AG|NSU]] made [[Lambretta]]s under license from 1950 to 1955, during which they developed their Prima scooter. Production of the Prima began when NSU's license to build Lambrettas ran out. [[Zündapp]] made the popular [[Zündapp Bella|Bella]] scooter in the 1950s and 1960s. It was in production for about ten years, in three engine sizes, {{convert|150|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}, {{convert|175|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} and {{convert|200|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}. They could perform all day at a steady speed of {{convert|60|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}. Extremely reliable and very well made, many of these scooters still exist today. [[Maico]] built the large [[Maicoletta]] scooter in the 1950s. It had a single cylinder piston-port [[two-stroke engine]], with four foot-operated gears and centrifugal fan cooling. The Maicoletta had a choice of engine sizes, approximately {{convert|175|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}, {{convert|250|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}, or {{convert|275|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}, The tubular frame was built on motorcycle principles, with long-travel telescopic forks and {{convert|14|in|0|adj=on}} wheels. The Maicoletta had a top speed of {{convert|70|mi/h|km/h|abbr=on}} which was comparable with most {{convert|250|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} motorcycles of the time. Other German scooters made by motorcycle manufacturers included the [[DKW]] Hobby, the [[Dürkopp]] Diana, and the [[Triumph (TWN)|TWN]] Contessa.{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}}
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Classic German scooters">
20061018 Fertig montiert 04.JPG|alt=Goggo scooter, the first road vehicle made by Glas|Goggo scooter, made by [[Glas (company)|Glas]]
Heinkel IMG 1249.jpg|alt=The Heinkel Tourist was noted for its touring ability|Heinkel Tourist
ZweiRadMuseumNSU NSU Prima.JPG|alt=NSU developed the Prima from the Lambretta it had previously built under license|1957 NSU Prima
Zündapp Bella R 154 (2008-05-21) Seitenansicht ret.jpg|alt=The [[Zündapp Bella]] was the most popular German scooter in the 1960s|1958 [[Zündapp Bella]] R 154
Maicoletta (33).JPG|alt=One of the largest scooters of the classic age|[[Maicoletta]] scooter
ZweiRadMuseumNSU DKW Hobby.JPG|alt=DKW Hobby|1954 DKW Hobby
Dürkopp Diana 1955.jpg|alt=Dürkopp Diana|1955 Dürkopp Diana
File:ZweiRadMuseumNSU Quickly.JPG|[[NSU Quickly]] {{cvt|50|cc|cuin}} [[Two-stroke engine|T/S]] [[moped]] (1953)
</gallery>

====United Kingdom====

In the United Kingdom, [[Douglas (motorcycle)|Douglas]] manufactured the Vespa under license from 1951 to 1961 and assembled them from 1961 to 1965.<ref name="DouglasVespaHistory">{{cite web| url =http://www.veteranvespaclub.com/1008.html| title =A History of the Douglas Vespa| work = Veteran Vespa Club| publisher =VVC | location =Essex, UK |access-date =2010-08-24 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100228194532/http://www.veteranvespaclub.com/1008.html |archive-date=2010-02-28 }}</ref> [[Birmingham Small Arms Company|BSA]] and [[Triumph Engineering Co Ltd|Triumph]] made several models of scooter including the BSA Dandy 70, the [[Triumph Tina]], and the [[Triumph Tigress]]. The Tigress was made from 1959 to 1964 and was sold with a 175&nbsp;cc 2-stroke single engine or a 250&nbsp;cc 4-stroke twin;<ref name="NMMTigress">{{cite web| url = http://www.nationalmotorcyclemuseum.co.uk/museum/exhibits/Triumph/1959-250cc-Triumph-TW2-Tigress-Twin-/45/| title = 1959 250cc Triumph TW2 Tigress Twin| work = The National Motorcycle Museum| location = Solihull, UK |access-date = 2010-08-26 }}{{failed verification|date=August 2021}}</ref> both versions used a foot-operated four-speed gearbox.{{Citation needed|date=August 2010}} The 250 twin had a top speed of {{Convert|70|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}.<ref name="NMMTigress" /> The BSA Sunbeam was a [[badge engineering|badge engineered]] version of the Tigress.{{Citation needed|date=August 2010}}
The early 2000's saw the small scale production of the [[Scomadi]] scooter, a retro styled UK designed and manufactured scooter. Scomadis were styled after classic Lambrettas. A number of different models at different capacity was produced. Production was later moved to Thailand.

====Eastern Bloc====
In [[Eastern Bloc]] countries scooters also became popular in the second half of 1950s, but their production was a result of [[planned economy]] rather than market competition. The Soviet Union started in 1957 with producing [[reverse engineering|reverse engineered]] copies of 150 cc Vespa and 200 cc Glas Goggo as [[Vyatka (motor scooter)|Vyatka]] and Tula T-200 respectively.<ref>Vorontsov, A., Pevzner, Ye., Dolnikov, D., Popov, A., Sazonov, R. (2003) ''Entscyklopediya mototsyklov''. Moscow: Za rulom. {{ISBN|5-85907-340-2}}. p. 130, 499 {{in lang|ru}}</ref> They and their developments were manufactured in big numbers into the 1980s. In [[East Germany]], [[Industriewerke Ludwigsfelde|IWL]] manufactured several own design 125 cc and 150 cc scooters (most notably SR 59 Berlin) from 1955 to 1964, when the authorities decided to switch the production to trucks.<ref>Vorontsov, A., Pevzner, Ye., Dolnikov, D., Popov, A., Sazonov, R. (2003) ''Entscyklopediya mototsyklov''. Moscow: Za rulom. {{ISBN|5-85907-340-2}}. p. 221 {{in lang|ru}}</ref> There were also produced small 50 cc [[Simson (company)|Simson]] scooters, manufactured into the 1990s.<ref>Vorontsov, A., Pevzner, Ye., Dolnikov, D., Popov, A., Sazonov, R. (2003) ''Entscyklopediya mototsyklov''. Moscow: Za rulom. {{ISBN|5-85907-340-2}}. p. 218-219 {{in lang|ru}}</ref> From 1959 until 1965 there was produced the only Polish scooter, 150 cc to 175 cc [[WFM Osa]].<ref>Zakrzewski, Adam (2010), ''Auto-moto PRL: władcy dróg i poboczy''. Warsaw: Demart. p. 146-148. {{ISBN|978-83-7427-484-5}}</ref> In Czechoslovakia, there was produced a unique 175 cc scooter [[Čezeta]] at the outbreak of 1950s/1960s, then there remained only small 50 cc [[Jawa Moto|Jawa]] scooter-style [[moped]]s.<ref>Vorontsov, A., Pevzner, Ye., Dolnikov, D., Popov, A., Sazonov, R. (2003) ''Entscyklopediya mototsyklov''. Moscow: Za rulom. {{ISBN|5-85907-340-2}}. p. 552, 562 {{in lang|ru}}</ref>
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Eastern Bloc scooters">
Мотороллер Электрон фото1.JPG|Soviet Vyatka-3 Elektron
Wiesel rechts 1-1.jpg|IWL Wiesel
Troll001.jpg|IWL TR Troll
1978 Schwalbe Simson Scooter.jpg|1978 Simson Schwalbe
WFM Osa PICT0038.jpg|Polish 1963 WFM Osa
Cezeta scooter at Regiontour 2010.jpg|Czechoslovak [[Čezeta]]
</gallery>

====India====
{{Unreferenced section|date=May 2011}}
Scooters are responsible for about 70 percent of India's gasoline consumption and the cost of a 100-kilometer ride is approximately 100 rupees ($1.30). Electric scooters are just one percent of all scooters, but this number is expected to increase to 74 percent of all scooters sold in India by 2040. The cost of operating an electric scooter is a sixth of the cost of a gasoline version.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Sundria |first1=Saket |last2=Chakraborty |first2=Debjit |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-11-12/record-fuel-costs-convince-scooter-loving-indians-to-go-electric |title=Record Fuel Costs Convince Scooter-Loving Indians to Go Electric |work=[[Bloomberg News]] |date=2021-11-12 |accessdate=2021-11-16 }}</ref>

[[Automobile Products of India|API]] were the first scooter manufacturers in India, with a Lambretta model in the 1950s. [[Bajaj Auto]] manufactured its line of scooters from 1972 to 2009, which included the [[Bajaj Chetak|Chetak]], [[Bajaj Legend|Legend]], [[Bajaj Super|Super]] and [[Bajaj Priya|Priya]]. The Chetak and Legend were based on the Italian [[Vespa Sprint]]. It was discontinued in 2009.

Another Vespa partner in India was [[Lohia Machinery Limited|LML Motors]]. Beginning as a joint-venture with Piaggio in 1983, LML, in addition to being a large parts supplier for Piaggio, produced the [[LML NV|P-Series scooters]] for the Indian market. In 1999, after protracted dispute with Piaggio, LML bought back Piaggio's stake in the company and the partnership ceased. LML continues to produce (and also exports) the P-Series variant known as the [[Stella (scooter)|Stella]] in the U.S. market and by other names in different markets.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Indian scooters">
Bajaj chetak scooter 01.jpg|[[Bajaj Chetak]]
Stellafront.jpg|[[Stella (scooter)|LML Stella]]
</gallery>

====East Asia====
Since the 1980s Japan, and latterly China and Taiwan, have become world leaders in the mass production of plastic bodied scooters,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.jacksscootershop.com/history.html|title = I have owned about 25 Honda and Yamaha scooters over the years}}</ref> most often with "twist-and-go" type transmissions (where gear selection and clutch operation are fully automatic). A popular early model being the [[Honda NQ50|Honda Spree/Nifty Fifty]]. Advertising campaigns in the USA featured popular stars like Michael Jackson (Suzuki), and Grace Jones and Lou Reed (Honda),<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.openculture.com/2014/09/iles-davis-grace-jones-adam-ant-devo-in-honda-ads.html|title = Watch Miles Davis, Grace Jones, Adam Ant & Devo in 1980s Ads for Honda Scooters &#124; Open Culture}}</ref> and sales of Japanese scooters peaked there in the 1980s.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-07-30/-monkey-bike-nears-extinction-as-japan-cuts-tailpipe-emissions|title = This 50cc Japanese Icon May be About to Go Extinct|newspaper = Bloomberg.com|date = 30 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.motorscooterguide.net/1980s-japanese-scooter-era/|title = Motor Scooter Guide &#124; 80's Japanese Era|date = 11 December 2020}}</ref> Both [[2-stroke]] and [[4-stroke]] plastic bodied scooters have been mass-produced in East Asia, with engine and transmission designs being either local designs or license built versions of European engines (eg [[Minarelli]] or [[Moto Morini|Morini]]). A popular 4-stroke engine in Chinese production is the [[GY6 engine]], but electric motor-scooters are constantly increasing in the Chinese home market share.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="East Asian plastic bodied scooters">
Honda_Spree.jpg|[[Honda NQ50|Honda Spree/Nifty Fifty]] (Japan)
Honda_lead_125_front_large.JPG|[[Honda NH series|Honda Lead]] (Japan)
Suzuki_SJ50_QT.jpg|[[Suzuki|Suzuki SJ50QT]] made for Suzuki by the Chinese [[Jincheng Group]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.jincheng.com/tzhz/jclmen.html |title=Nanjing Jincheng Suzuki Motorcycle Co., Ltd |website=www.jincheng.com |access-date=12 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070504031922/http://www.jincheng.com/tzhz/jclmen.html |archive-date=4 May 2007 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
File:YAMAHA_JOG-SPORTS.JPG|[[Yamaha Jog]] (Japan)
Flyscooters_Il_Bello.JPG|[[Flyscooters Il Bello|Flyscooters Il Bello (China)]]
Kymco_Super_9_Scooter.jpeg|[[Kymco Super 9]] (Taiwan)
</gallery>

=== Australia ===
[[File:Scooter series SLNSW FL19094518.jpg|thumb|Scooter club outing, Sydney, 1951]]Unlike other countries, Australia had no major motorcycle companies, nor scooter manufacturers in the original hey day of scooters in the 1950s and 1960s. Scooters were mostly traditionally imported from Italy, and then in the 1970s and 1980s, from Japan and Asia. Australian scooters have only appeared in the last 20 years or so, and many of them relating to the recent advent and viability of the electric engine.

Australian scooter companies design, market and manage the company from Australia, but manufacturing is largely done in Asia, with some assembly in Australia. The oldest scooter company in Australia is [[Vmoto]], a Perth based company that started off importing and distributing scooters, but then started to manufacture its own electric scooters. Sydney based Hunted Scooters<ref>{{Cite web|title=How this Australian Got his Custom-Built Dream Scooter to Market|url=https://collectivehub.com/2017/09/how-this-australian-got-his-custom-built-dream-scooter-to-market/|access-date=2021-12-18|website=Collective Hub|date=21 September 2017 |language=en-US}}</ref> producers smaller numbers of niche petrol scooters, based on the customised Honda Ruckus scooters in Japan.

More recently Sydney based [[Fonz Moto]] produce [[electric scooters]] and [[electric motorbike]]s, assembled in Australia, using overseas and Australian sourced components.<ref>[https://www.fonzmoto.com/ Fonz Moto]</ref>

==Developments==
Trends around the world have seen new developments of the classic scooter, some with larger engines and tires. High-end scooter models now include comprehensive technological features, including cast aluminium frames, engines with integral counterbalancing, and cross-linked brake systems. Some of these scooters have comfort features such as an alarm, start button, radio, [[windshield]], heated hand grips and full instrumentation (including clock or outside temperature gauge).<ref>{{Cite news |title=Easy riders: Scooters on road toward mainstream acceptance;The two-wheel vehicle's image is evolving, in the minds of Americans, from geek chic to mainstream cool |first=Will |last=Kilburn |newspaper=[[The Christian Science Monitor]] |date=March 21, 2008 |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0321/p12s01-stgn.html }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=More than joy rides;Scooters gain popularity as an affordable alternative for commuters |first= Laura |last=McCandlish |newspaper=[[The Baltimore Sun]] |date=June 11, 2008 |url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bal-bz.scooters11jun11,0,4355379.story }}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=On the road on big scooters |last=Holter |first=James |magazine=American Motorcyclist |date=October 2007 |pages=41–42, 44–46 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QvYDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA39 }}</ref>

===Three-wheeled scooter===
[[File:Piaggio mp3.jpg|thumb|Piaggio MP3]]
During World War II, [[Cushman (company)|Cushman]] made the Model 39, a three-wheeled utility scooter with a large storage bin between the front wheels. They sold 606 to the US military during the war.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=6921 |title=National Museum of the US Air Force - Fact Sheet: Cushman Model 39 Delivery Scooter |publisher=US Air Force |website=Nationalmuseum.af.mil |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref>

The [[Piaggio MP3]] is a modern [[tilting three wheeler|tilting]] three-wheeled scooter. Unlike most motorcycle trikes, it is a reverse trike, with two front wheels which steer, and a single driven rear wheel. The front suspension allows both front wheels to tilt independently, so that all three wheels remain in contact with the ground as it leans when cornering.

===Maxi-scooter===
[[File:Honda Helix.jpg|thumb|[[Honda CN250|Honda CN250 Helix]]]]

A '''maxi-scooter'''<ref name=PopMechX9 >{{cite web|url=http://www.popularmechanics.com/outdoors/adventures/1278191.html |title=PM.Zone Test: Piaggio X9 Evolution 500 Maxi Scooter |publisher=Popularmechanics.com |date=2004-12-07 |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref> or '''touring scooter'''<ref name=MDCTouringScooters >{{cite web|url=http://www.motorcycle.com/specs/touring-scooter.html |title=Bike Specs - 2009 Touring Scooter Motorcycles |publisher=Motorcycle.com |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref> is a large scooter, with engines ranging in size from {{convert|150|to|850|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}, and using larger frames than normal scooters with longer wheelbases. Typically, the dash is fixed & is not mounted on the handlebars

The trend toward maxi-scooters began in 1986 when Honda introduced the [[Honda CN250|CN250]] Helix / Fusion / Spazio.{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} Many years later, Suzuki launched the [[Suzuki Burgman|Burgman]] 400 and 650 models.<ref name="MUSA2007Bergman400ride">{{cite web |url=http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/245/794/Motorcycle-Article/2007-Suzuki-Burgman-400-First-Ride.aspx |title=Motorcycle USA 2007 Suzuki Burgman 400 First Ride |publisher=Motorcycle-usa.com |access-date=2010-10-14 |archive-date=2010-05-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100513023259/http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/245/794/Motorcycle-Article/2007-Suzuki-Burgman-400-First-Ride.aspx |url-status=dead }}</ref> Honda ({{convert|600|cc|cuin|abbr=on|disp=or}}), Aprilia/Gilera ({{convert|839|cc|cuin|abbr=on|disp=or}}), Yamaha ({{convert|530|cc|cuin|abbr=on|disp=or}}), Kymco ({{convert|700|cc|cuin|abbr=on|disp=or}}) and others have also introduced scooters with engine displacements ranging from {{convert|400|to|850|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}. Honda's [[Honda PS250|PS250]] (also known as Big Ruckus) features a motorcycle-like exoskeleton instead of bodywork.

A new direction in maxi-scooters has the engine fixed to the frame. This arrangement improves handling by allowing bigger wheels and less unsprung weight, also tending to move the centre of gravity forwards. The trend toward larger, more powerful scooters with fully automatic transmissions converges with an emerging trend in motorcycle design that foreshadows automatic transmission motorcycles with on-board storage. Examples include the [[Aprilia Mana 850]] automatic-transmission motorcycle and the [[Honda NC700D Integra]], which is a scooter built on a motorcycle platform.

===Enclosed scooter===
{{Main|Cabin motorcycle}}

Some scooters, including the [[BMW C1]] and the [[Honda Gyro|Honda Gyro Canopy]], have a windscreen and a roof. The Piaggio MP3 offered a tall windscreen with roof as an option.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://enclosedscooter.com/category/production/ |title=Enclosed scooters |access-date=2011-02-25 |archive-date=2010-12-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101209043925/http://enclosedscooter.com/category/production/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===Four-stroke engines and fuel-injection===
{{Unreferenced section|date=May 2009}}

With increasingly strict [[Emission standard|environmental laws]], including [[United States emission standards]] and [[European emission standards]], more scooters are using [[Four-stroke cycle|four-stroke]] engines again.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px">
File:PiaggioXEvo250ie.jpg|[[Piaggio XEvo]] 250ie, four-stroke Maxi-scooter
File:Aprilia SR50 Factory.jpg|Aprilia SR50
</gallery>

===Electric scooter===
{{Main|Electric motorcycles and scooters}}

Scooters may be powered by an electric motor powered by a rechargeable battery. Petroleum hybrid-electric scooters are available. Electric scooters are rising in popularity because of higher gasoline prices, and battery technology is gradually improving, making this form of transportation more practical<ref>[http://www.technologyreview.com/NanoTech/17837/ Technology Review: Making Electric Vehicles Practical<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>—the battery size is constrained by what the frame will fit, limiting range.

==Underbone==
{{Unreferenced section|date=December 2010}}
{{Main|Underbone}}

An [[underbone]] is a motorcycle built on a chassis consisting mostly of a single large diameter tube. An underbone differs from a conventional motorcycle mainly by not having a structural member connecting the [[Head tube|head stock]] to the structure under the front of the seat and by not having a fuel tank or similarly styled appendage in the space between the riders knees. Underbones are commonly referred to as "step-throughs" and appeal to both genders in much the same way as scooters.

Underbones are often mistaken for scooters and are sometimes marketed as such. However, an underbone does not have a footboard, and is therefore not a scooter.

The engine of an underbone is usually fixed to the chassis under the downtube, while a scooter usually has its engine mounted on its [[swingarm]]. As a result, underbone engines are usually further forwards than those of scooters. A typical underbone therefore has a more central [[center of mass|centre of gravity]] than a typical scooter. Furthermore, having an engine mounted on the swingarm gives a typical scooter more [[unsprung mass]] than a typical underbone. These factors give a typical underbone better handling than a typical scooter.

The engine of an underbone typically drives the rear wheel by a chain of the kind used on a conventional motorcycle. This final drive is often concealed by a chain enclosure to keep the chain clean and reduce wear. The final drive of a scooter with a swingarm-mounted engine runs in a sealed oil bath and is shorter.

An underbone is usually fitted with near full-size motorcycle wheels, which are often spoked. Scooter wheels are usually small, and made from pressed steel. In both cases, more recent examples often have cast alloy wheels. The bigger wheels of an underbone allow more ventilation and better cooling for the brakes than the smaller wheels of a scooter.

While the engine and suspension layouts described here for scooters and underbones are typical, they are not rigid definitions. There have been scooters with fixed engines and chain drive, and there have been underbones with swingarm-mounted engines. A twenty-first century example of variance from the typical scooter layout is the [[Suzuki Choinori]], which had both its engine and its rear axle rigidly bolted to its frame.

<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px" caption="Some atypical scooters and underbones">
File:Kymco Activ.JPG|Kymco Activ underbone. This has a slanted downtube, which defines an underbone, and no foot platform, the presence of which defines a scooter.
File:Heinkel Tourist 103 A0, Bj. 1956.jpg|1956 Heinkel Tourist. This scooter had a frame-mounted engine and a swingarm with an integral chain enclosure.
File:Honda NC50 1980 rear.jpg|1980 Honda NC50. This underbone had its engine mounted on its swingarm.
File:Choinori.jpg|Suzuki Choinori. Introduced in 2003, this scooter has no rear suspension. Both its engine and its rear axle are bolted to its frame.
</gallery>


== Popularity ==
== Popularity ==
[[Image:Piaggio_X9_250.jpg|250px|thumb|Larger Piaggio X9 scooter suitable for long distance touring]]
In many parts of the world, such as [[Europe]] and Asia, motor scooters are a popular form of [[urban area|urban]] transportation due to their size, [[fuel efficiency|fuel-efficiency]], weight, and typically larger storage room than a motorcycle. In many localities, certain road motor scooters are considered by law to be in the same class as mopeds or small motorcycles and therefore they have fewer restrictions than that of larger motorcycles.


Motor scooters are very popular in Asia, particularly in countries such as India, Indonesia, The Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Japan and Taiwan where there is local manufacturing. They are also popular in the West, mainly in Europe (particularly Italy and the Mediterranean), but not in the US.<ref name= Brinson2007>{{Cite book |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=idy4vwz_-_oC&pg=PT165 |access-date= 2010-12-28 |pages=153–154 |title= The Complete Idiot's Guide to Motor Scooters |first1= Bev |last1= Brinson |first2=Bryce |last2=Ludwig |publisher=Penguin |year=2007 |isbn= 978-1-59257-639-5 }}</ref> Parking, storage, and traffic issues in crowded cities, along with the easy driving position make them a popular form of urban transportation. In many nations, scooter (and other small motorcycle) sales exceed those of automobiles, and a motor scooter is often the family transport.{{Citation needed|date=December 2010}}
In the last few years, new technology has emerged. Fuel-injected scooters are very efficient and durable. Aprilia released the SR Ditech in 2002. The fuel consumption of this [[gasoline_direct_injection|direct injection]] scooter is one litre of fuel for 50 kilometres of driving. Later on, more brands, such as [[Derbi]] and [[Peugeot]], started using direct injection systems for their scooters. Due to new environmental laws, scooters had to change because the Euro3 standard allows only four-stroke engines. Some scooter drivers don't agree this is a good solution because they are used to two-stroke motors.


In Taiwan, road infrastructure has been built specifically with two wheelers in mind, with separate lanes and intersection turn boxes. In Thailand, scooters are used for street to door taxi services, as well as for navigating through heavy traffic. The extensive range of cycle tracks in the Netherlands extends into parts of Belgium and Germany and is open to all small powered two-wheelers. Motor scooters are popular because of their size, [[fuel efficiency|fuel-efficiency]], weight, and typically larger storage room than a motorcycle. In many localities, certain road motor scooters are considered by law to be in the same class as mopeds or small motorcycles and therefore they have fewer restrictions than do larger motorcycles.{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}}
More recently [[China]] has become the largest manufacturer of scooters producing over 50% of the worlds supply according to the [http://www.mic.org/ MIC (Motorcycle Industry Council)]. With lower prices and better quality control China is now making scooters which meet strict United States [[DOT]] & [[EPA]] standards. Some manufacturers from China and [[Mexico]] like Ricardo Motors meet the very strict [[California]] Air Resources Board's [http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/onroad/cert/cert.php CARB] requirements.{{fact}}


According to the [[Motorcycle Industry Council]], sales of motor scooters in the United States have more than doubled since 2000. The motorcycle industry as a whole has seen 13 years of consecutive growth. According to council figures, 42,000 scooters were sold in 2000. By 2004, that number increased to 97,000.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nbcnews.com/id/9087878 |title=Is a motor scooter in your future? |website=NBC News |date=2005-10-07 |access-date=2010-10-14}}</ref> Scooter sales in 2008 in the United States were up 41% on 2007,<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.mic.org/news020609.cfm | title= Scooters and Dual-Purpose Bikes are the Stars in Preliminary 2008 Motorcycle Industry Council Sales Review | publisher= [[Motorcycle Industry Council]] | date= 6 February 2009 | access-date= 28 December 2010 | archive-date= 31 January 2011 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110131103710/http://www.mic.org/news020609.cfm | url-status= dead }}</ref> and represented 9% of all powered two-wheeler sales.<ref name="WebBikeWorld09Stats">{{cite web | url= http://www.webbikeworld.com/motorcycle-news/statistics/2009-motorcycle-sales-statistics.htm | title= 2009 Motorcycle Sales Statistics and Information | publisher= webBikeWorld | access-date= 28 December 2010 | archive-date= 14 December 2010 | archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101214164520/http://www.webbikeworld.com/motorcycle-news/statistics/2009-motorcycle-sales-statistics.htm | url-status= dead }}</ref> However, there was a decrease in US scooter sales in 2009 of 59% against2008, compared with a 41% fall for all powered two-wheelers,<ref name="MotoUSA20100121">{{cite news| title = Motorcycle Sales Down 40.8% Says MIC| first = Bart| last = Madson| url = http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/2/5588/Motorcycle-Article/Motorcycle-Sales-Down-40-8--Says-MIC.aspx| website = Motorcycle USA| date = 2010-01-21| access-date = 2011-01-01| quote = Scooters sales, which boomed in 2008 during all-time highs for gas prices, fell 59% from 2008 – the most precipitous segment drop.| archive-date = 2011-08-27| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110827132039/http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/2/5588/Motorcycle-Article/Motorcycle-Sales-Down-40-8--Says-MIC.aspx| url-status = dead}}</ref> while the scooter's contribution to total US powered two-wheeler sales in 2009 fell to 6%.<ref name="WebBikeWorld09Stats" /> After a two-year slump, scooter sales in the US rebounded in the first quarter of 2011.<ref name=Carpenter2011>{{Citation |title= Scooter sales surge after two-year slump |first= Susan |last= Carpenter |author-link=Susan Carpenter |newspaper= [[Los Angeles Times]] |date= June 30, 2011 |access-date= 2011-07-03 |url= http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-scooters-20110630,0,3108776.story }}</ref>
=== Maxi-Scooters ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px">
Another trend sees larger scooters, called maxi-scooters, with engines ranging in size from 250 cc up to 650 cc. This trend began in 1986 when Honda introduced the [[Honda CN250|Fusion/Helix/CN250]], and continued with the 1999 introduction of the Suzuki Burgman 400. Piaggio, Yamaha, Aprilia, Kymco and others have since introduced scooters with engine displacements ranging from 400 to 650 cc. Honda's PS250 or Big Ruckus defies commons scooter classification in that its ''step-thru'' is high and the bike features no bodywork but rather a motorcycle-like exoskeleton.
File:Monsoon couple on motorcycle.jpg|Bangalore couple on LML Vespa
File:Vespa in Trieste.jpg|Rider looking for a place at parking lot in [[Trieste]], where use of a scooter in city transport is among highest in Italy.{{Citation needed|date=September 2014}}
File:Zweiradparkplatz in Sorrent.jpg|Motor scooter parking lot
</gallery>


===In popular culture===
This trend toward larger, more powerful scooters with fully automatic transmissions is matched by an emerging trend in motorcycle design that foreshadows automatic transmission motorcycles with on-board storage.


A common reference for the glamorous image of scooters is ''[[Roman Holiday]]'', a 1953 romantic comedy in which [[Gregory Peck]] carries [[Audrey Hepburn]] around Rome on a Vespa.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.nola.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2011/06/hundreds_of_vespa_scooter_enth.html |title=Hundreds of Vespa scooter enthusiasts putt-putt through New Orleans |date=2011-06-17 |author=Katy Reckdahl |publisher=[[New Orleans Times-Picayune]] }}</ref><ref name="BuffaloNewsOldNew">{{cite news|url=http://www.buffalonews.com/city/article441049.ece|title=Gas prices fuel scooter sales: {{convert|100|mpgus|mpgimp L/km}} drives area residents to cheaper alternative|author=Mark Sommer|publisher=[[Buffalo News]]|date=2001-06-02|access-date=2011-06-29|archive-date=2011-11-11|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111111083307/http://www.buffalonews.com/city/article441049.ece|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Old and new, museum highlights scooters and their quirks|author=Nick Kurczewski/New York Times News Service|date=2011-06-19|publisher=Bend Bulletin|url=http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110619/NEWS0107/106190358/0/NEWS01}}</ref>
=== Scootering lifestyle ===
Scootering is the hobby of riding, restoring, and repairing motor scooters. In recent decades, collecting vintage motor scooters has become a popular hobby. Good examples of collectible scooters are European scooters like [[Vespa]]s, [[Lambretta (motorscooter)|Lambretta]]s, [[Heinkel]]s, American scooters like [[Cushman]]s and [[Powell Motor Company|Powell]]s, and Japanese scooters like Fuji Rabbits and Mitsubishi Silver Pigeons.


In the 1960s [[mod (subculture)|mod subculture]], some members of this British youth cult used motorscooters for transportation, usually Vespas or Lambrettas. Scooters had provided inexpensive transportation for decades before the development of the mod subculture, but the mods stood out in the way that they treated the vehicle as a fashion accessory, expressed through clubs such as the [[Ace of Herts]]. Italian scooters were preferred for their cleanlined, curving shapes and gleaming [[chrome plating|chrome]]. For young mods, Italian scooters were the "embodiment of continental style and a way to escape the working-class row houses of their upbringing".<ref name="straight.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.straight.com/article/vespa-scoots-sexily-back-to-vancouver|title=Vespa Scoots Sexily Back to Vancouver|last=Sarti|first=Doug|date=June 3, 2004|publisher=Vancouver Free Press|location=Vancouver, Canada|quote=The scooter, to them, was the embodiment of continental style and a way to escape the working-class row houses of their upbringing.|work=straight.com|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110522112423/http://www.straight.com/article/vespa-scoots-sexily-back-to-vancouver|archive-date=2011-05-22|url-status=live|access-date=2012-05-06}}</ref> They customized their scooters by painting them in "two-tone and [[Candy Apple Red|candyflake]] and overaccessorized [them] with luggage racks, crash bars, and scores of mirrors and fog lights",<ref name="straight.com"/> and they often put their names on the small windscreen. Engine side panels and front bumpers were taken to local electroplating workshops and plated with highly reflective chrome.
In the [[United Kingdom|UK]], starting in the 1960s day members of youth subcultures such as the [[Mod (lifestyle)|mods]], [[skinheads]] and [[scooterboy]]s have driven customized Vespas and Lambrettas, some adorned with many extra mirrors and chrome parts (and others cut down to the basics). The scootering scene has spread to other countries as far away as [[Australia]], Japan, the United States and [[Canada]]. All around the world people continue to gather their vintage scooters at rallies which are held throughout the year. A calendar of scooter rallies can be found on the [http://www.scoot.net/calendar Scoot.net Calendar].


Scooters were also a practical and accessible form of transportation for 1960s teens. In the early 1960s, [[public transport]] stopped relatively early in the night, and so having scooters allowed mods to stay out all night at dance clubs. To keep their expensive suits clean and keep warm while riding, mods often wore long army parkas. For teens with low-end jobs, scooters were cheaper than cars, and they could be bought on a payment plan through newly available [[hire purchase]] plans. After a law was passed requiring at least one mirror be attached to every motorcycle, mods were known to add four, ten, or as many as 30 mirrors to their scooters. The cover of [[The Who]]'s album ''[[Quadrophenia]]'', which includes themes related to mods and [[Rocker (subculture)|rockers]], depicts a young man on a Vespa GS with four mirrors attached.<ref>{{cite book|last=Townsend|first=Pete|title=Quadrophenia|year=1973|publisher=Fabulous Music Ltd., 1973|location=London|page=40|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7r3PSgAACAAJ&q=quadrophenia}}</ref> The album spawned a [[Quadrophenia (film)|1979 motion picture of the same name]].
== Scootering terms ==

[[image:BKK_Vespa078.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Bangkok]]: Scooter in transport-business]]
[[Scooterboy]] magazines include the British monthly magazine ''[[Scootering (British magazine)|Scootering]]''<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Gillard|first1=Andy|first2=Gareth |last2=Brown |author3=Stuart Lanning |title=Scootering |journal=Scootering |year=1986 |url=http://www.mortonsmediagroup.com/media/sco.asp#ratecardia}}</ref>
* ''Scooter rallies'' are overnight events where scooter enthusiasts from various areas gather in one area. A scooter rally may be comprised of multiple meets, swap meets, rides, parties, and concerts. Some people may have a run leading to it. The [http://www.capitalcityscooterclub.com/index.php Garden City Rally] — held every [[Victoria Day]] in [[Victoria, British Columbia]] — is the longest continuously running scooter rally in North America.
and the American quarterly magazine ''Scoot!''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Whitney |first1=April |first2=Josh |last2=Rogers |first3=Mike |last3=Zorn |first4=Casey |last4=Earls |first5=Barry |last5=Synoground |journal=Scoot! |year=1995|url=http://www.scootmagazine.com/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517035608/http://www.scootmagazine.com/|url-status=dead|archive-date=2008-05-17 |title= Scoot!}}</ref>
* A single-day event where people from various areas gather in one spot is called a ''scooter meet''. A meet may or may not have a ride leading to or from it.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="150px">
* A ''run'', an overnight event where people from a single area ride to an overnight destination (i.e. Seattle's [http://www.flying-monkeys.com/ Monkey Run]), is another scootering event. In the case of the [http://scootercannonball.com/ Cannonball Run], there are multiple overnight destinations.
File:Old Mods photo.jpg|[[Mod (subculture)|Mods]] on a scooter
* One-day events where people from a single area ride together are ''rides''.
File:Scooter rally, Smallbrook, IW, UK.jpg|Scooter [[Rallying|rally]] at [[Smallbrook Stadium]], [[Isle of Wight]]
</gallery>


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
*[[Electric motorcycles and scooters]]
*[[LPG powered scooters]]
* [[Auto rickshaw]]
*[[Cutdown]]
* [[Cutdown]]
* [[Fuel gas-powered scooter#Conversion kits for petrol scooters|Fuel conversion kits for scooters]]
*[[Moped]]
*[[List of scooter manufacturers]]
* [[List of motor scooter manufacturers and brands]]
*[[Auto rickshaw]]
* [[List of scooters]]
* [[Miles per gallon gasoline equivalent]]
* [[Mobility scooter]]
* [[Motorized wheelchair]]
* [[Segway PT]]
{{div col end}}


{{Clear}}
== External links ==
{{commonscat|Scooters}}
* [http://www.2strokebuzz.com 2stroke Buzz - Scooter news since 1996]
* [http://www.scootering.com Scootering Magazine]
* [http://www.scootquarterly.com Scoot!Quarterly magazine]
* [http://www.scooterbbs.com The International Scooterist BBS]
* [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/2StrokeSmoke Two-Stroke Smoke Mailing List]
* [http://www.scoot.net Scoot.net Scooter Chat & Photo Galleries]
* [http://www.scooterhelp.com Scooter Help Tech Advice]
* [http://www.vespaforever.net Vespa and other scooters]
* [http://www.iscootny.com/scoot_faq.htm IScootNY Scooter FAQ]
* [http://www.thescooterscoop.com Scooter news, reviews,and commentary]
* [http://www.scootertur.com Students Around the world by Scooter]
* [http://www.mrasa.asn.au/scooterclub/ Scooter Club for all Scooterists, social and ride events]


== Notes ==
{{Reflist|refs=


<ref name=ScooterDefinition>Various scooter definitions:
* {{cite book |title= The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary |edition= third |year= 1968 |orig-year= 1956 |publisher= Oxford University Press |location= Oxford, UK |pages= 1808–09|quote='''3.''' A child's toy consisting of a narrow flat piece of wood on low wheels, with a steering-handle, propelled by pushing with one foot on the ground; also, a similar machine propelled by a motor}}
* {{cite book |editor1-first= Philip Babcock |editor1-last= Gove |title= Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged |year= 1966 |publisher= G & C Merriam |location= Springfield, Mass. USA |isbn=0-7135-1037-4 |pages= 1476, 2035|quote= a low 2- or 3-wheeled automotive vehicle resembling a child's scooter, having a seat so that the rider does not straddle the engine, sometimes having a parcel compartment, but having smaller wheels and being less powerful than a motorcycle.}}
* {{cite book |title= Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary |year= 1970 |publisher= The World Publishing Company |location= Cleveland OH USA |isbn= 0-529-04852-3 |page= [https://archive.org/details/webstersnewtwent00webs_0/page/1625 1625] |quote= '''1.''' a child's vehicle, consisting of a low, narrow footboard with a wheel at each end, the front one attached to a handlebar for steering: it is moved by a series of pushes made by one foot against the ground. '''2.''' a somewhat similar vehicle equipped with a seat and propelled by a small internal-combustion engine: in full ''motor scooter'' |url= https://archive.org/details/webstersnewtwent00webs_0/page/1625 }}
* {{cite book |title= The Living Webster Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language|year= 1973 |publisher= The English Language Institute of America |isbn= 0-8326-0001-6 |page= 624|quote= '''motor scooter''', ''n'' A scooter like vehicle usu. having two wheels separated by a low footboard, and equipped with a motor and a seat for the driver}}
* {{cite book |title= Collins English Dictionary and Thesaurus |edition= 3rd|year= 2004 |publisher= Harper Collins Publications |location= Glasgow |isbn= 0-00-718139-6 |page= 776|quote='''motor scooter''' ''n'' a light motorcycle with small wheels and an enclosed engine. Often shortened to ''scooter''}}
* {{cite book |title= Chambers Concise Dictionary |year= 2004 |publisher= Chambers Harrup Publishers |location= Edinburgh |isbn= 0-550-10072-5 |page= [https://archive.org/details/chambersconcised0000unse/page/1084 1084] |quote= '''2.''' (''in full'' '''motor scooter''') a small-wheeled motorcycle with a protective front shield curving back to form a support for the feet |url= https://archive.org/details/chambersconcised0000unse/page/1084 }}
* {{cite book |title= World Book Dictionary |year= 2005 |publisher= World Book |isbn= 0-7166-0105-2 |page= 1356 |quote='''motor scooter''': A vehicle like a child's scooter, except that the driver is seated. It is run by a motor. }}</ref>
}}


==External links==
{{Commons category|Motor scooters}}

* {{curlie|/Business/Automotive/Motorcycles/Scooters/}}
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{{Types of motorcycles}}
{{private transport}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Scooter (Motorcycle)}}
[[Category:Motor scooters| ]]
[[Category:Motor scooters| ]]
[[Category:Motorcycle classifications]]
[[Category:Motorcycle classifications]]

[[cs:Skútr]]
[[da:Scooter]]
[[de:Motorroller]]
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[[ja:スクーター]]
[[pl:Skuter]]
[[ru:Мотороллер]]
[[fi:Skootteri]]

Latest revision as of 23:15, 2 June 2024

The Italian Vespa was the first globally popular scooter
The term scooty has become the generic term for scooter in India[1]

A scooter (motor scooter) is a motorcycle with an underbone or step-through frame, a seat, a transmission that shifts without the operator having to operate a clutch lever, a platform for their feet, and with a method of operation that emphasizes comfort and fuel economy. Elements of scooter design were present in some of the earliest motorcycles, and motor scooters have been made since at least 1914. More recently, scooters have evolved to include scooters exceeding 250cc classified as Maxi-scooters.

1919 Autoped Scooter

The global popularity of motor scooters dates from the post-World War II introductions of the Vespa and Lambretta models in Italy. These scooters were intended to provide economical personal transportation (engines from 50 to 150 cc or 3.1 to 9.2 cu in). The original layout is still widely used in this application. Maxi-scooters, with larger engines from 200 to 850 cc (12 to 52 cu in) have been developed for Western markets.

Scooters are popular for personal transportation partly due to being more affordable, easier to operate, and more convenient to park and store than a car. Licensing requirements for scooters are easier and cheaper than for cars in most parts of the world, and insurance is usually cheaper. The term motor scooter is sometimes used to avoid confusion with kick scooter, but can then be confused with motorized scooter or e-scooter, a kick-scooter with an electric motor.

Description[edit]

The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines a motor scooter as a motorcycle similar to a kick scooter with a seat, a floorboard, and small or low wheels.[2] The US Department of Transportation defines a scooter as a motorcycle that has a platform for the operator's feet or has integrated footrests and has a step-through architecture.[3]

The classic scooter design features a step-through frame and a flat floorboard for the rider's feet.[citation needed] This design is possible because most scooter engines and drive systems are attached to the rear axle or under the seat. Unlike a conventional motorcycle, in which the engine is mounted on the frame, most modern scooters allow the engine to swing with the rear wheel, while most vintage scooters and some newer retro models have an axle-mounted engine. Modern scooters starting from the late-1980s generally use a continuously variable transmission (CVT), while older ones use a manual transmission with the gearshift and clutch control built into the left handlebar.

Scooters usually feature bodywork, including a front leg shield and body that conceals all or most of the mechanicals. There is often some integral storage space, either under the seat, built into the front leg shield, or both. Scooters have varying engine displacements and configurations ranging from 50 cc (3.1 cu in) single-cylinder to 850 cc (52 cu in) twin-cylinder models.

Traditionally, scooter wheels are smaller than conventional motorcycle wheels and are made of pressed steel or cast aluminum alloy, bolt on easily, and often are interchangeable between front and rear. Some scooters carry a spare wheel. Many recent scooters use conventional front forks with the front axle fastened at both ends.

Regulatory classification[edit]

Some jurisdictions do not differentiate between scooters and motorcycles. Though some jurisdictions classify smaller engine scooters (typically 50 cc or 3.1 cu in maximum) as moped class vehicles rather than motorcycles, meaning these scooters often have less stringent regulations (for example, 50 cc scooters can be driven with a normal car drivers license - or by adults aged 18+ years without any license (other than a valid liability insurance) at all as in case of at least Denmark - in many jurisdictions, and might pay less road-tax and be subject to less stringent roadworthiness testing).

United States[edit]

For all legal purposes in the United States of America, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) recommends using the term motorcycle for all of these vehicles. However, while NHTSA excludes the term motor scooter from legal definition, it proceeds, in the same document, to give detailed instructions on how to import a small motor scooter.[4]

California[edit]

As of 2020 the US state of California has a regulatory system for 2- and 3-wheeled vehicles. It classifies vehicles with fewer than four wheels into the following categories:[5]

  • Motorcycle: a motorcycle is any 2- or 3-wheeled gas operated vehicle weighing under 1,500 lbs. with an engine displacement greater than or equal to 150ccs. Operation requires an M1 class license, and such vehicles must be registered with the state and carry mandatory insurance as well as bear a motorcycle license plate. Motorcycles may travel on any public roadway, including freeways, and may carry a single passenger in addition to the driver. Helmets are mandatory.
  • Motor-driven cycle: a motor-driven cycle is 2-wheeled gas operated vehicle with an engine displacement of 149ccs or less that does not qualify as a moped (see below) and is capable of traveling greater than 30 mph. It has the same licensing, registration, insurance, license plating, and helmet requirements as a motorcycle, though it may not travel on freeways. Such vehicles are commonly referred to as "scooters".
  • Moped: a moped (or "motorized bicycle") is a 2- or 3-wheeled device with an automatic transmission capable of traveling no more than 30 mph, with either a gas engine displacement of less than 50ccs (i.e., 49ccs or less) with built-in pedals like a bicycle for human operation, OR, if powered only by electricity, it must not produce more than four gross brake horsepower (bicycle pedals are optional for electric mopeds). There are no registration or insurance requirements for the device, but the operator themself must have an M1 or M2 class license and must personally carry the minimum state automobile insurance and the moped itself must bear a special moped license plate. A single passenger is permitted if the vehicle is fitted with a specific seat and footrests for same.
  • Motorized tricycle/quadricycle: a motorized tricycle or quadricycle is a 3- or 4-wheeled vehicle propelled by a gas motor not capable of traveling greater than 30 mph and with a gross brake horsepower of 2 or less.
  • Motorized scooter: a motorized scooter is a 2-wheeled vehicle not capable of traveling greater than 15 mph with a floorboard designed to be stood upon while operating. They do not require a license plate or insurance, and may not be driven on a roadway with a posted speed limit greater than 25 mph. A valid class C driver license is required, as is a bicycle helmet. Passengers are prohibited. They may be operated on a bikepath or bikeway but not on a sidewalk. If a given roadway has a bicycle lane, the motorized scooter must travel within it, and can only make a left-hand turn by dismounting and crossing an intersection as a pedestrian.
  • Electric bicycle: California recognizes three classes of electric bicycles. A class 1 electric bicycle is a bicycle with pedals whose electric motor only assists the rider when using the pedals and stops assisting when the bicycle reaches 20 mph; a class 2 electric bicycle is a bicycle with pedals whose motor can drive the bicycle entirely on its own, but will not assist the rider above 20 mph; a class 3 electric bicycle is identical to a class 1 electric bicycle, but is capable of traveling up 28 mph before the engine stops assisting the rider AND is equipped with a speedometer. No electric bicycle requires insurance, a license, or any form of registration or license plate as it is not considered a "motor vehicle" by the state.

Emissions[edit]

The emissions of mopeds and scooters have been the subject of multiple studies. Studies have found that two-stroke 50 cc mopeds, with and without catalytic converters, emit ten to thirty times more hydrocarbons and particulate emissions than the outdated Euro 3 automobile standards.[6][7] In the same study, four-stroke mopeds, with and without catalytic converters, emitted three to eight times more hydrocarbons and particulate emissions than the Euro 3 automobile standards.[6] Approximate parity with automobiles was achieved with NOx emissions in these studies. Emissions performance was tested on a g/km basis and was unaffected by fuel economy. In 2011 the United States Environmental Protection Agency allowed motorcycles, scooters, and mopeds with engine displacements less than 280 cc to emit ten times the NOx and six times the CO than the median Tier II bin 5 automobile regulations.[8][9] An additional air quality challenge can also arise from the use of moped and scooter transportation over automobiles, as a higher density of two-wheeled vehicles can be supported by existing transportation infrastructure.[10]

In Genoa, 2-stroke engine scooters made before 1999 are banned since 2019.[11]

In some cities, such as Shanghai, petrol scooters/mopeds are banned and only LPG or electric scooters are allowed to be used in the city due to air pollution.[12][13]

History[edit]

Predecessors[edit]

Scooter-like traits began to develop in motorcycle designs around the 1900s. In 1894, Hildebrand & Wolfmüller in Munich, Germany produced the first motorcycle that was available for purchase. Their motorcycle had a step-through frame, with its fuel tank mounted on the down tube, its parallel two-cylinder engine mounted low on the frame, and its cylinders mounted in line with the frame. It was water-cooled and had a radiator built into the top of the rear fender. It became the first mass-produced and publicly sold powered two-wheel vehicle, and among the first powered mainly by its engine rather than foot pedals. Maximum speed was 40 km/h (25 mph). The rear wheel was driven directly by rods from the pistons in a manner similar to the drive wheels of steam locomotives. Only a few hundred such bikes were built, and the high price and technical difficulties made the venture a financial failure for both Wolfmüller and his financial backer, Hildebrand.[14]

In France, the Auto-Fauteuil was introduced in 1902. This was basically a step-through motorcycle with an armchair instead of a traditional saddle. Production continued until 1922.[15]

First generation (1915–1930)[edit]

The motoped entered production in 1915, and is believed to be the first motor scooter.[16] They were followed that year by the Autoped, whose engine was engaged by pushing the handlebar column forward and whose brake was engaged by pulling the column back.[17] Autopeds were made in Long Island, New York[18] from 1915 to 1921,[17] and were also made under license by Krupp in Germany from 1919 to 1922, following World War I.[19]

The number of scooter manufacturers and designs increased after World War I. The British - ABC Motors Skootamota, the Kenilworth, and the Reynolds Runabout debuted in 1919, with Gloucestershire Aircraft Company following with its Unibus in 1920.[20] The Skootamota was noted for being practical, popular, and economical,[21] the Kenilworth for its electric lights,[22] and the Reynolds Runabout for its advanced specifications, including front suspension, a two-speed gearbox, leg shields, and a seat sprung with leaf springs and coil springs.[23] The Unibus also had a two-speed gearbox, but it is more notable for its full bodywork, similar to that which would appear of second- and third-generation scooters.[21][24]

The reputation of first-generation scooters was damaged by a glut of unstable machines with flexible frames,[21][25] and more substantial examples like the Reynolds Runabout and the Unibus were too expensive to be competitive.[21][23] The first generation had ended by the mid-1920s.[21]

Second generation (1936–1968)[edit]

E. Foster Salsbury and Austin Elmore developed the Salsbury Motor Glide, which was a division of Northrop Aircraft,[26] a scooter with a seat above an enclosed drivetrain, and began production in 1936 in California. In 1938, Salsbury introduced a more powerful scooter with a continuously variable transmission (CVT). This was the first use of a CVT on a scooter.[27] It was such a success that Salsbury attempted to license the design to several European manufacturers including Piaggio. The Motor Glide set the standards for all later models. It inspired production of motor scooters by Powell, Moto-scoot, Cushman, Rock-Ola, and others.[28]

The Cushman Company produced motor scooters from 1936 to 1965.[29] Cushman was an engine manufacturer that started making scooters after Salsbury found their offer to supply engines to be unacceptable. Cushman and Salsbury competed against each other, with both companies advertising the economy of their scooters. Cushman claimed an efficiency of 120 mpg‑US (2.0 L/100 km; 140 mpg‑imp) at 30 mph (48 km/h). Cushman introduced a centrifugal clutch to their scooters in 1940.[27] The Cushman Auto Glide Model 53 was designed to be dropped by parachute with Army Airborne troops, and was eventually called the "Cushman Airborne".[30] Cushman scooters were also used around military bases for messenger service.[31]

Salsbury continued manufacturing scooters until 1948,[32] while Cushman continued until 1965.[33]

Small numbers of the 165 cc (10.1 cu in) Harley-Davidson Topper scooter were produced from 1960 to 1965 using the engine from their line of light motorcycles based on the DKW RT 125. It had a fiberglass body, a continuously variable transmission, and a pull-cord starting mechanism.[34][35]

Early postwar Japan[edit]

After World War II, wartime aircraft manufacturers were forbidden from making aircraft, and had to find other products to make in order to stay in business. Fuji Sangyo, a part of the former Nakajima Aircraft Company, began production of the Fuji Rabbit S-1 scooter in June 1946. Inspired by Powell scooters used by American servicemen, the S1 was designed to use surplus military parts, including the tailwheel of a Nakajima bomber, re-purposed as the front wheel of the S1.[37][38] Later that year, Mitsubishi introduced the C10, the first of its line of Silver Pigeon scooters.[39][40] This was inspired by a Salsbury Motor Glide that had been brought to Japan by a Japanese man who had lived in the United States.[40]

Production of the Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon and the Fuji Rabbit continued through several series until the 1960s.[37][41] Some series of the Fuji Rabbit were developed to a high level of technological content; the S-601 Rabbit Superflow had an automatic transmission with a torque converter, an electric starter, and pneumatic suspension.[42][43] Mitsubishi ended scooter production with the C140 Silver Pigeon,[41] while Fuji continued production of the Rabbit until the last of the S-211 series was built in June 1968.[37]

Third generation (1946–1964) and beyond[edit]

Italy - Vespa and Lambretta[edit]

1952 Lambretta 125 D

In post-World War II Italy the Piaggio Vespa became the standard for scooters, and has remained so for over 60 years.[44] Patented in April 1946, it used aircraft design and materials. D'Ascanio's 98 cc (6.0 cu in) scooter had various new design concepts, including a stress-bearing structure. The gear shift lever was moved to the handlebars for easier riding. The engine was placed near the rear wheel, eliminating the belt drive. The typical fork support was replaced by an arm similar to an aircraft carriage for easier tire-changing. The body design protected the driver from wind and road dirt. The smaller wheels and shorter wheelbase provide improved maneuverability through narrow streets and congested traffic. The name originated when Piaggio's president, upon seeing the prototype, remarked "Sembra una vespa", "It looks like a wasp".[citation needed]

Months after the Vespa, in 1947, Innocenti introduced the Lambretta, beginning a rivalry with Vespa. The scooter was designed by Innocenti, his General Director Giuseppe Lauro and engineer Pierluigi Torre. The Lambretta was named after Lambrate, the Milanese neighborhood where the factory stood.[45] It debuted in 1947 at the Paris Motor Show. The Lambretta 'A' went on sale on December 23, 1947, and sold 9,000 units in one year. It was efficient, at a time when fuel was severely rationed. It had a top speed of 45 mph (72 km/h) from a fan-cooled engine of 123 cc (7.5 cu in). The first Lambretta designs had shaft drive and no rear suspension, later designs used various drive and suspension systems until Lambretta settled on a swingarm-mounted engine with chain drive.[46]

Also other Italian firms manufactured scooters in 1950s and 1960s, like Italjet and Iso.

Germany[edit]

Germany's aviation industry was also dismantled after World War II. Heinkel stayed in business by making bicycles and mopeds,[47] while Messerschmitt made sewing machines and automobile parts.[48] Messerschmitt took over the German license to manufacture Vespa scooters from Hoffman in 1954 and built Vespas under from 1954 to 1964.[49] Heinkel designed and built its own scooters. The Heinkel Tourist was a large and relatively heavy touring scooter produced in the 1960s. It provided good weather protection with a full fairing, and the front wheel turned under a fixed nose extension. It had effective streamlining, perhaps thanks to its aircraft ancestry. Although it had only a 175 cc (10.7 cu in) four stroke motor, it could sustain speeds of 70 mph (110 km/h). Heinkel scooters were known for their reliability.[citation needed]

Glas, a manufacturer of agricultural machinery, made the Goggo scooter from 1951 to 1955. Glas discontinued scooter production to concentrate on its Goggomobil microcar.[50]

Several manufacturers in the German motorcycle industry made scooters. NSU made Lambrettas under license from 1950 to 1955, during which they developed their Prima scooter. Production of the Prima began when NSU's license to build Lambrettas ran out. Zündapp made the popular Bella scooter in the 1950s and 1960s. It was in production for about ten years, in three engine sizes, 150 cc (9.2 cu in), 175 cc (10.7 cu in) and 200 cc (12 cu in). They could perform all day at a steady speed of 60 mph (97 km/h). Extremely reliable and very well made, many of these scooters still exist today. Maico built the large Maicoletta scooter in the 1950s. It had a single cylinder piston-port two-stroke engine, with four foot-operated gears and centrifugal fan cooling. The Maicoletta had a choice of engine sizes, approximately 175 cc (10.7 cu in), 250 cc (15 cu in), or 275 cc (16.8 cu in), The tubular frame was built on motorcycle principles, with long-travel telescopic forks and 14-inch (356 mm) wheels. The Maicoletta had a top speed of 70 mph (110 km/h) which was comparable with most 250 cc (15 cu in) motorcycles of the time. Other German scooters made by motorcycle manufacturers included the DKW Hobby, the Dürkopp Diana, and the TWN Contessa.[citation needed]

United Kingdom[edit]

In the United Kingdom, Douglas manufactured the Vespa under license from 1951 to 1961 and assembled them from 1961 to 1965.[51] BSA and Triumph made several models of scooter including the BSA Dandy 70, the Triumph Tina, and the Triumph Tigress. The Tigress was made from 1959 to 1964 and was sold with a 175 cc 2-stroke single engine or a 250 cc 4-stroke twin;[52] both versions used a foot-operated four-speed gearbox.[citation needed] The 250 twin had a top speed of 70 mph (110 km/h).[52] The BSA Sunbeam was a badge engineered version of the Tigress.[citation needed] The early 2000's saw the small scale production of the Scomadi scooter, a retro styled UK designed and manufactured scooter. Scomadis were styled after classic Lambrettas. A number of different models at different capacity was produced. Production was later moved to Thailand.

Eastern Bloc[edit]

In Eastern Bloc countries scooters also became popular in the second half of 1950s, but their production was a result of planned economy rather than market competition. The Soviet Union started in 1957 with producing reverse engineered copies of 150 cc Vespa and 200 cc Glas Goggo as Vyatka and Tula T-200 respectively.[53] They and their developments were manufactured in big numbers into the 1980s. In East Germany, IWL manufactured several own design 125 cc and 150 cc scooters (most notably SR 59 Berlin) from 1955 to 1964, when the authorities decided to switch the production to trucks.[54] There were also produced small 50 cc Simson scooters, manufactured into the 1990s.[55] From 1959 until 1965 there was produced the only Polish scooter, 150 cc to 175 cc WFM Osa.[56] In Czechoslovakia, there was produced a unique 175 cc scooter Čezeta at the outbreak of 1950s/1960s, then there remained only small 50 cc Jawa scooter-style mopeds.[57]

India[edit]

Scooters are responsible for about 70 percent of India's gasoline consumption and the cost of a 100-kilometer ride is approximately 100 rupees ($1.30). Electric scooters are just one percent of all scooters, but this number is expected to increase to 74 percent of all scooters sold in India by 2040. The cost of operating an electric scooter is a sixth of the cost of a gasoline version.[58]

API were the first scooter manufacturers in India, with a Lambretta model in the 1950s. Bajaj Auto manufactured its line of scooters from 1972 to 2009, which included the Chetak, Legend, Super and Priya. The Chetak and Legend were based on the Italian Vespa Sprint. It was discontinued in 2009.

Another Vespa partner in India was LML Motors. Beginning as a joint-venture with Piaggio in 1983, LML, in addition to being a large parts supplier for Piaggio, produced the P-Series scooters for the Indian market. In 1999, after protracted dispute with Piaggio, LML bought back Piaggio's stake in the company and the partnership ceased. LML continues to produce (and also exports) the P-Series variant known as the Stella in the U.S. market and by other names in different markets.

East Asia[edit]

Since the 1980s Japan, and latterly China and Taiwan, have become world leaders in the mass production of plastic bodied scooters,[59] most often with "twist-and-go" type transmissions (where gear selection and clutch operation are fully automatic). A popular early model being the Honda Spree/Nifty Fifty. Advertising campaigns in the USA featured popular stars like Michael Jackson (Suzuki), and Grace Jones and Lou Reed (Honda),[60] and sales of Japanese scooters peaked there in the 1980s.[61][62] Both 2-stroke and 4-stroke plastic bodied scooters have been mass-produced in East Asia, with engine and transmission designs being either local designs or license built versions of European engines (eg Minarelli or Morini). A popular 4-stroke engine in Chinese production is the GY6 engine, but electric motor-scooters are constantly increasing in the Chinese home market share.

Australia[edit]

Scooter club outing, Sydney, 1951

Unlike other countries, Australia had no major motorcycle companies, nor scooter manufacturers in the original hey day of scooters in the 1950s and 1960s. Scooters were mostly traditionally imported from Italy, and then in the 1970s and 1980s, from Japan and Asia. Australian scooters have only appeared in the last 20 years or so, and many of them relating to the recent advent and viability of the electric engine.

Australian scooter companies design, market and manage the company from Australia, but manufacturing is largely done in Asia, with some assembly in Australia. The oldest scooter company in Australia is Vmoto, a Perth based company that started off importing and distributing scooters, but then started to manufacture its own electric scooters. Sydney based Hunted Scooters[64] producers smaller numbers of niche petrol scooters, based on the customised Honda Ruckus scooters in Japan.

More recently Sydney based Fonz Moto produce electric scooters and electric motorbikes, assembled in Australia, using overseas and Australian sourced components.[65]

Developments[edit]

Trends around the world have seen new developments of the classic scooter, some with larger engines and tires. High-end scooter models now include comprehensive technological features, including cast aluminium frames, engines with integral counterbalancing, and cross-linked brake systems. Some of these scooters have comfort features such as an alarm, start button, radio, windshield, heated hand grips and full instrumentation (including clock or outside temperature gauge).[66][67][68]

Three-wheeled scooter[edit]

Piaggio MP3

During World War II, Cushman made the Model 39, a three-wheeled utility scooter with a large storage bin between the front wheels. They sold 606 to the US military during the war.[69]

The Piaggio MP3 is a modern tilting three-wheeled scooter. Unlike most motorcycle trikes, it is a reverse trike, with two front wheels which steer, and a single driven rear wheel. The front suspension allows both front wheels to tilt independently, so that all three wheels remain in contact with the ground as it leans when cornering.

Maxi-scooter[edit]

Honda CN250 Helix

A maxi-scooter[70] or touring scooter[71] is a large scooter, with engines ranging in size from 150 to 850 cc (9.2 to 51.9 cu in), and using larger frames than normal scooters with longer wheelbases. Typically, the dash is fixed & is not mounted on the handlebars

The trend toward maxi-scooters began in 1986 when Honda introduced the CN250 Helix / Fusion / Spazio.[citation needed] Many years later, Suzuki launched the Burgman 400 and 650 models.[72] Honda (600 cc or 37 cu in), Aprilia/Gilera (839 cc or 51.2 cu in), Yamaha (530 cc or 32 cu in), Kymco (700 cc or 43 cu in) and others have also introduced scooters with engine displacements ranging from 400 to 850 cc (24 to 52 cu in). Honda's PS250 (also known as Big Ruckus) features a motorcycle-like exoskeleton instead of bodywork.

A new direction in maxi-scooters has the engine fixed to the frame. This arrangement improves handling by allowing bigger wheels and less unsprung weight, also tending to move the centre of gravity forwards. The trend toward larger, more powerful scooters with fully automatic transmissions converges with an emerging trend in motorcycle design that foreshadows automatic transmission motorcycles with on-board storage. Examples include the Aprilia Mana 850 automatic-transmission motorcycle and the Honda NC700D Integra, which is a scooter built on a motorcycle platform.

Enclosed scooter[edit]

Some scooters, including the BMW C1 and the Honda Gyro Canopy, have a windscreen and a roof. The Piaggio MP3 offered a tall windscreen with roof as an option.[73]

Four-stroke engines and fuel-injection[edit]

With increasingly strict environmental laws, including United States emission standards and European emission standards, more scooters are using four-stroke engines again.

Electric scooter[edit]

Scooters may be powered by an electric motor powered by a rechargeable battery. Petroleum hybrid-electric scooters are available. Electric scooters are rising in popularity because of higher gasoline prices, and battery technology is gradually improving, making this form of transportation more practical[74]—the battery size is constrained by what the frame will fit, limiting range.

Underbone[edit]

An underbone is a motorcycle built on a chassis consisting mostly of a single large diameter tube. An underbone differs from a conventional motorcycle mainly by not having a structural member connecting the head stock to the structure under the front of the seat and by not having a fuel tank or similarly styled appendage in the space between the riders knees. Underbones are commonly referred to as "step-throughs" and appeal to both genders in much the same way as scooters.

Underbones are often mistaken for scooters and are sometimes marketed as such. However, an underbone does not have a footboard, and is therefore not a scooter.

The engine of an underbone is usually fixed to the chassis under the downtube, while a scooter usually has its engine mounted on its swingarm. As a result, underbone engines are usually further forwards than those of scooters. A typical underbone therefore has a more central centre of gravity than a typical scooter. Furthermore, having an engine mounted on the swingarm gives a typical scooter more unsprung mass than a typical underbone. These factors give a typical underbone better handling than a typical scooter.

The engine of an underbone typically drives the rear wheel by a chain of the kind used on a conventional motorcycle. This final drive is often concealed by a chain enclosure to keep the chain clean and reduce wear. The final drive of a scooter with a swingarm-mounted engine runs in a sealed oil bath and is shorter.

An underbone is usually fitted with near full-size motorcycle wheels, which are often spoked. Scooter wheels are usually small, and made from pressed steel. In both cases, more recent examples often have cast alloy wheels. The bigger wheels of an underbone allow more ventilation and better cooling for the brakes than the smaller wheels of a scooter.

While the engine and suspension layouts described here for scooters and underbones are typical, they are not rigid definitions. There have been scooters with fixed engines and chain drive, and there have been underbones with swingarm-mounted engines. A twenty-first century example of variance from the typical scooter layout is the Suzuki Choinori, which had both its engine and its rear axle rigidly bolted to its frame.

Popularity[edit]

Motor scooters are very popular in Asia, particularly in countries such as India, Indonesia, The Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Japan and Taiwan where there is local manufacturing. They are also popular in the West, mainly in Europe (particularly Italy and the Mediterranean), but not in the US.[75] Parking, storage, and traffic issues in crowded cities, along with the easy driving position make them a popular form of urban transportation. In many nations, scooter (and other small motorcycle) sales exceed those of automobiles, and a motor scooter is often the family transport.[citation needed]

In Taiwan, road infrastructure has been built specifically with two wheelers in mind, with separate lanes and intersection turn boxes. In Thailand, scooters are used for street to door taxi services, as well as for navigating through heavy traffic. The extensive range of cycle tracks in the Netherlands extends into parts of Belgium and Germany and is open to all small powered two-wheelers. Motor scooters are popular because of their size, fuel-efficiency, weight, and typically larger storage room than a motorcycle. In many localities, certain road motor scooters are considered by law to be in the same class as mopeds or small motorcycles and therefore they have fewer restrictions than do larger motorcycles.[citation needed]

According to the Motorcycle Industry Council, sales of motor scooters in the United States have more than doubled since 2000. The motorcycle industry as a whole has seen 13 years of consecutive growth. According to council figures, 42,000 scooters were sold in 2000. By 2004, that number increased to 97,000.[76] Scooter sales in 2008 in the United States were up 41% on 2007,[77] and represented 9% of all powered two-wheeler sales.[78] However, there was a decrease in US scooter sales in 2009 of 59% against2008, compared with a 41% fall for all powered two-wheelers,[79] while the scooter's contribution to total US powered two-wheeler sales in 2009 fell to 6%.[78] After a two-year slump, scooter sales in the US rebounded in the first quarter of 2011.[80]

In popular culture[edit]

A common reference for the glamorous image of scooters is Roman Holiday, a 1953 romantic comedy in which Gregory Peck carries Audrey Hepburn around Rome on a Vespa.[81][82][83]

In the 1960s mod subculture, some members of this British youth cult used motorscooters for transportation, usually Vespas or Lambrettas. Scooters had provided inexpensive transportation for decades before the development of the mod subculture, but the mods stood out in the way that they treated the vehicle as a fashion accessory, expressed through clubs such as the Ace of Herts. Italian scooters were preferred for their cleanlined, curving shapes and gleaming chrome. For young mods, Italian scooters were the "embodiment of continental style and a way to escape the working-class row houses of their upbringing".[84] They customized their scooters by painting them in "two-tone and candyflake and overaccessorized [them] with luggage racks, crash bars, and scores of mirrors and fog lights",[84] and they often put their names on the small windscreen. Engine side panels and front bumpers were taken to local electroplating workshops and plated with highly reflective chrome.

Scooters were also a practical and accessible form of transportation for 1960s teens. In the early 1960s, public transport stopped relatively early in the night, and so having scooters allowed mods to stay out all night at dance clubs. To keep their expensive suits clean and keep warm while riding, mods often wore long army parkas. For teens with low-end jobs, scooters were cheaper than cars, and they could be bought on a payment plan through newly available hire purchase plans. After a law was passed requiring at least one mirror be attached to every motorcycle, mods were known to add four, ten, or as many as 30 mirrors to their scooters. The cover of The Who's album Quadrophenia, which includes themes related to mods and rockers, depicts a young man on a Vespa GS with four mirrors attached.[85] The album spawned a 1979 motion picture of the same name.

Scooterboy magazines include the British monthly magazine Scootering[86] and the American quarterly magazine Scoot!.[87]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "business.outlookindia.com | Women On Wheels". 2011-07-17. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2022-05-07.
  2. ^ Various scooter definitions:
    • The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (third ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. 1968 [1956]. pp. 1808–09. 3. A child's toy consisting of a narrow flat piece of wood on low wheels, with a steering-handle, propelled by pushing with one foot on the ground; also, a similar machine propelled by a motor
    • Gove, Philip Babcock, ed. (1966). Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, Unabridged. Springfield, Mass. USA: G & C Merriam. pp. 1476, 2035. ISBN 0-7135-1037-4. a low 2- or 3-wheeled automotive vehicle resembling a child's scooter, having a seat so that the rider does not straddle the engine, sometimes having a parcel compartment, but having smaller wheels and being less powerful than a motorcycle.
    • Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary. Cleveland OH USA: The World Publishing Company. 1970. p. 1625. ISBN 0-529-04852-3. 1. a child's vehicle, consisting of a low, narrow footboard with a wheel at each end, the front one attached to a handlebar for steering: it is moved by a series of pushes made by one foot against the ground. 2. a somewhat similar vehicle equipped with a seat and propelled by a small internal-combustion engine: in full motor scooter
    • The Living Webster Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language. The English Language Institute of America. 1973. p. 624. ISBN 0-8326-0001-6. motor scooter, n A scooter like vehicle usu. having two wheels separated by a low footboard, and equipped with a motor and a seat for the driver
    • Collins English Dictionary and Thesaurus (3rd ed.). Glasgow: Harper Collins Publications. 2004. p. 776. ISBN 0-00-718139-6. motor scooter n a light motorcycle with small wheels and an enclosed engine. Often shortened to scooter
    • Chambers Concise Dictionary. Edinburgh: Chambers Harrup Publishers. 2004. p. 1084. ISBN 0-550-10072-5. 2. (in full motor scooter) a small-wheeled motorcycle with a protective front shield curving back to form a support for the feet
    • World Book Dictionary. World Book. 2005. p. 1356. ISBN 0-7166-0105-2. motor scooter: A vehicle like a child's scooter, except that the driver is seated. It is run by a motor.
  3. ^ "DOT Regulation Part 571.123: Standard No. 123; Motorcycle controls and displays". Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. Archived from the original on 2009-01-26. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  4. ^ "Importation and Certification FAQ's Directory-Motorcycles and Scooters". Nhtsa.dot.gov. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  5. ^ "California Vehicle Codes". Myron's Mopeds.
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External links[edit]