I'd like to know where. In all the years I've been on the road I've never seen a cyclemoter on the road, and I live in a reasonably populous part of the country (outskirts of Liverpool).
Add on cyclemotors were sold in large quantities from 1949 through to the 1960s and at one time over one million were registered on British roads. They gradually disappeared over time, but the complete VeloSolex motorised bicycle continued in production until well into the 1980s.
When precisely? When the Thatcher government zero-rated VED for all electric vehicles (note zero-rated, not exempted)?
You're mixing up motor vehicles with e-bikes which are not classed as motor vehicles but as bicycles. They are exempted VED by the EAPC regulations of 1983, nothing to do with zero rating of any motor vehicles which have completely separate legislation
I was involved doing specialist work for the motorcycle trade, although on account of illness I do very little now, just a as a self-financing hobby. One of my local traders (now deceased) specialised in vintage motorcycles and he'd never to my knowledge dealt with cyclemotors. Mopeds, yes.
Once again you are mixing up the issue with mopeds which are not related to bicycle motors in any way. Mopeds of all kinds are capable of self power alone, but cyclemotors are assist motors. The mopeds you mentioned earlier were a more modern continuation of the
Autocycles that were made in the 1930s, '40s and '50s by Excelsior and others, and which remain registered and taxed if road used today as a few are. Cyclemotors were almost all add-ons for ordinary bicycles and were mainly handled by cycle dealers and rarely the motorcycle trade. There is still at least one of them on the market which is sold online. Here's three examples of the previous ones, the
Power Pak, the
Cyclemaster and the
BSA Winged Wheel, all very big sellers in their day. Liverpool would have had loads of them buzzing around in their heyday of the 1950s, just like everywhere else.
They tended to disappear from 1960 onwards as increasing affluence made scooters and similar affordable, but a few cyclemotors hung around since they were an easy way to get a full motor cycle licence. Testers weren't very stringent when testing riders on them. To this day there a number of specialist websites all about various cyclemotors and even some enthusiast clubs.
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