One of the coolest thing things to leave the Consumer Electronics Show this year was a bike that could remain upright completely all alone, both while stopping and at low speed. Regardless of whether it had a rider or not, it won't fall over. Honda calls this innovation Honda Ride Assist, and considers it to be an approach to enable riders to keep their bicycles upright at stoplights and in tight stopping circumstances. 

Yet, how can it work? Trust it or not, Honda Ride Assist doesn't utilize whirligigs or moving weights. As Engineering Explained's Jason Fenske outlines, the framework rather keeps the bicycle upright with modest directing information sources. The bicycle can likewise protract its wheelbase via consequently modifying the front fork rake, giving it considerably greater strength. 

To an accomplished rider, it might appear to be pointless to have something like this on a bicycle. Be that as it may, unpracticed riders crash so frequently, it's anything but difficult to see the estimation of an innovation like this. What's more, who knows? In the event that you ever end up attempting to recover a 900-lb Goldwing on its wheels, you may be longing for Honda Ride Assist.


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