This May Be The Sketchiest Sort-Of-Honda Ever Crafted By Human Hands

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I was going to say that I’ve been on a weird, barely known microcar kick this week, but let’s be honest – that’s my natural state, isn’t it? It is. And that may be why I felt such a deep, visceral delight when I saw this wonderful and perhaps slightly alarming-looking little microcar, which seemed to be called a Honda Caren. A bit more research revealed that the story is a bit more complex; yes, in one sense, the car is a Honda Caren, but it’s not just a Honda Caren, it also seems to be something called a Cydes Car URI-II. It’s a three-wheeled microcar, but, as you may have noticed, the front wheel is not, as you’d usually expect, centered. There’s a reason for this, which, if you’ll just calm down a moment, I’ll explain.

The first key to this strange little car’s layout and name has to do with this, the true Honda Caren:

Caren1

The Caren was one of Honda’s little 50cc mopeds – a charming little machine, friendly and practical. Like all mopeds, though, it’s just a motor and some wheels nestled in your crotch, so you’re completely at the mercy of the weather and wind and insects and birds and whatever else you may be driving through. It’s an open vehicle, not closed like a cozy car, and for many people, that’s a deal breaker. Most of us like to be indoors while we travel.

It seems there was a company that understood this desire, and somehow felt that there were enough people who simultaneously wanted moped price and performance and the enclosed quality of a car, so they took the little Honda Caren and turned it into this:

Cydescar Ad

A little microcar! The company seems to have been called CydesCar, which is a play on “sidecar” which makes sense, because what they’ve really done, kind of, is added a sidecar to the Caren and then enclosed the entire thing in what is basically a little plastic shed. Here, look, this is how the wheels are arranged:

Wheellayout

See what’s going on there? That’s why the lone front wheel is stuck way over on the right side, because the base of the Honda Caren is there on the right side, albeit highly modified and integrated into this new body. The handlebars have been moved to the center of the body, which would be to the side of the moped itself, along with the seat. The left side has the lone “sidecar” wheel, and the whole thing looks gleefully precarious.

In fact, on the green one up there with the huge speakers in the back (from Bruce Weiner’s former microcar collection) even has a little caster wheel, possibly a shopping cart wheel, on the left side, I guess to help keep it from tipping over? This thing had to feel all kinds of unsettling in turns.

Interestingly, this wasn’t the first time this sort of layout had been tried; in the early 1900s, some cheap “cyclecars” used a similar sidecar-style arrangement, like the infamous Scott Scociable:

Scottsociable

Oh, one more thing about that brochure; I ran it through a translation app, and got some really funny and puzzling results for part of it:

Translation

Is that really what that says? “It has the appearance of a girl and a slightly chubby guy?” Is that how you sell microcars, by analogizing them to a pleasingly plump androgyne? Maybe!

The Caren, when converted to a microcar, seems to have been called the URI-II, and boasted some novel features, like a reverse gear of some kind, a little luggage rack, and a turning circle of under one meter!

Uri2 Specsjpg

The brochure here also shows it with the roof removed; I wonder if this was something you could actually do, or if they were just showing it this way to show the interior, which even had some luggage space available.

This is a very clever little thing, about as absolutely minimal a “car” as you could have. In many ways, this feels like a 1990 version of my Changli or similar absolutely minimal automotive solution. Basing the drivetrain on a popular moped like a Honda one is really clever. I can’t decide if this should be considered an add-on to the Honda Caren, or something entirely new, because so much of the original moped gets modified to make this work.

Carens Wild

Either way, I’m pretty impressed. It’s not clear at all how many of these were actually made, but there are some pictures of these floating around the web, including that shot of one in the bed of a kei-class truck, just to give a sense of how tiny these things are.

I’d kind of like to try to drive one of these; the asymmetrical wheel layout has to be entertaining, at the very least, right? I mean, until you tip it over.

 

Relatedbar

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The SARIT Is A Tiny Electric Microcar From Canada With A Strange Gasoline-Doomsday Sales Pitch

Let’s Consider The Italian Scooter-Maker’s Car That Was Built In France. And Tiny People: Cold Start

 

41 thoughts on “This May Be The Sketchiest Sort-Of-Honda Ever Crafted By Human Hands

  1. I bet you could easily make a modern version of this for the American market using any number of little mopeds on the market and a simple rotomolded plastic body. Using a 49 cc engine it would be legal for 14 year-olds without a license to drive, essentially becoming an American sans permis car. It’d be ridiculously slow though, so perhaps an e-bike-based version would be better?

    Of course many parents would be mortified by the lack of safety, but even so, I imagine it would be so cheap to manufacture that there would be a large enough market to make it profitable.

    Just make it super angular and silver with thin LED light strips and everyone will want one…

  2. “Like all mopeds… you’re completely at the mercy of the weather and wind and insects and birds and whatever else you may be driving through. It’s an open vehicle…”

    Not all mopeds. As the owner of a 1981 American Microcar Tri-Ped, I must point out that these came with a removable windshield, top, and doors. For the moped purists, yes, they have pedals, too, even though they aren’t visible in this photo:

    https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-ZNiH6Qft8pM/T4GwoRlpMUI/AAAAAAABPvo/Yq4p4ukiq1M/s800/1980%2520American%2520Microcar%2520Tri-Ped.jpg

        1. Oh, yeah, I can imagine sourcing spares may be a nightmare. Maybe fabricating new parts from scratch is the only way to go here? The removable bits seem like fairly simple pieces of plexiglass or something similar. This one even has a soft plastic cover that I don’t hate (seems more practical to pull off a soft cover and fold away than removing 3-4 individual plexiglass panels).

    1. Never heard of those and now I want one. If they made a 49cc version, it would be – well, really slow, but also legal for 14 year-olds to drive without a license, basically an American sans permis car! That could be nice for a kid to drive themselves to school in and whatnot.

  3. and a turning circle of under one meter!

    Umm it says “2.6 M” did you think that was feet?

    Actually it might be 2.5M, I cant tell because the pictures won’t expand when clicked!!

  4. I’m going to agree with everyone else. That thing looks like it would be terrifying to drive. I wonder if it’s more or less stable than a Reliant Robin?

    Also, I hate to be that guy, but the Honda Caren isn’t a “moped” as it doesn’t have pedals. It’s just a scooter.

  5. Nope. Still not the sketchiest Honda out there. That crown is won by the myriad 90s civics that have exhausts bigger than their cylinders and have been unsafe since their 8th owner somewhere around 2005.

  6. Is that really what that says? “It has the appearance of a girl and a slightly chubby guy?” 

    No, it says its length is 1.57m, about the height of a girl. Its weight is about the same as a fat guy at 70kg. It is gaining popularity because it is as easy to ride as a bicycle.

    Your translation app is sketchy as hell, how did it “translate” 1.57m to 1.573m?

  7. When I first laid my eyes upon this… this thing, I was baffled. The more I read, the more my concern grew. It’s barely a meter and a half long, one of it’s wheels are that of a shopping carts… When does this madness end?

    With that being said I need a roofless one now.

    1. this is totally it, the Little Tykes Cozy Coupe (and it’s an actual coupe!) when one of the front wheel axle/posts gets stripped out of the plastic carriage

  8. I apparently started my unique love of vehicles early. At 16 purchasedca Smiley-Demm moped. Very rare and a hoot to drive. Not transferable to a plastic fun car.

  9. The basic idea of encasing a motorbike and side car in a single enclosure seems sound enough, but I question what was really gained by moving the driving position to the center

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