August 16, 2011 5:01 AM PDT
Ran across this issue on my fb and thought I would pose it to you all and see if anyone knows anything that could help:
"Having a problem here in Pennsylvania. After riding my bike w/trike kit so that my disabled son can ride with me, the PA State Police are saying my bike isn't legal because it has 4 wheels. Two wheels on the bike and 2 on the trike kit. This is all I can afford and it now looks like I won't be riding my bike any time soon. Does anyone know what I can do or how I can get around this? Help please!"
These are some of the more pertanent responses, but I would like to hear from anyone that might have some better ideas on how she could deal with this:
according to PennDOT. The PA Vehicle Code specifically describes a motorcycle as having no more than three wheels. Also, a trailer must be towed BEHIND the towing vehicle, not under it, beside it, or straddling it like the Voyager Trike kit. Also, a trailer must have a 17 digit VIN, so it can be titled and registered, which yours does not have. For all these reasons, I could not get my RSV inspected with the Voyager Trike kit on it. Too bad, too because I loved it. I've since gotten rid of it and bought a sidecar setup. ABATE has written and published an article on this, and we have asked our local congressman to help, but so far no luck. If the law does get changed, I'd probably buy another one, but in PA, your rig is currently NOT legally a motorcycle or a trailer, and any motorcycle with one on it can not be inspected legally. I got that straight from PennDOT's Chief Legal Counsel in Harrisburg.
It is NOT LEGAL in PA! No more than three wheels in contact with the ground unless it meets the safety requirements of a motor VEHICLE, of course, (enclosed cab, steering wheel, 5 MPH bumpers, etc). Any motor CYCLE (including scooters, mopeds, sidecars and trikes) with more than three wheels is not legal in PA, period. Now, bear in mind, that my son and I had ours for almost two years. We were never pulled over for it. However, when I went to get it inspected (required annually in PA), NONE of the local dealers or shops would pass it. One even showed me the bulletin they got from PennDOT (PA's DMV) cautioning them not to pass motor driven cycles (PA's all inclusive term for motorcycles, mopeds, scooters, etc.) with more than three wheels in contact with the ground. As I noted in a previous post, a mechanic (and his shop) can both have their inspection licenses suspended/revoked for disregarding those PennDOT bulletins.
I don't know if any LEO's would stop a Voyager "Trike" just for being on the vehicle. While I do know more than a few of them, I certainly don't know them all. I'm sure there are some that would. However, the real problem, and the reason I started this thread, is that the bike can't be inspected with the kit on. Where you probably would get stopped is when you don't have a current inspection sticker on it because PennDOT won't allow it to pass. That is where you can, and probably would be stopped and almost certainly cited ($100+ a pop). Also, if you get pulled over more than a certain number of times for it, there is a section in the PA Vehicle Code that allows them to fine you $500+ a pop, for refusing to bring your vehicle into compliance. That could get awfully expensive, which is why I wanted to caution other PA riders who might be considering this option.
There was legislation introduced in PA earlier this year to ammend the PA code to include bikes with conversion kits to be considered motorcycles. It was referred to the Transportation Committee on 4/27, and has been "tabled" according to the website. I know there were several attempts to tack on other irrelevant stuff to the bill, but don't know how that went. ABATE of PA is keeping an eye on this bill, and DOES support the original writing of the bill. HB 1399!
Is there anyone out there that knows of a lobbyist group with lawyers that this person could contact directly to either get the new legislation rolling or to get a legal exception?
Thanks!