We reserve the right to charge all non-paying bidders and they will be reported to HiBid.ħ. If payment arrangements HAVE NOT been made within 24 hours of auction close, your purchase(s) will be forfeited. Terms are CASH or CERTIFIED FUNDS upon pick up or CREDIT CARD (Visa, MC, Discover, Am Ex) prior to pick up. Winning bidders are required to notify the auction company within 24 hours of purchase(s) with payment intentions. The credit card you enter at the time of registration IS NOT AUTOMATICALLY CHARGED AT THE COMPLETION OF THE SALE. Upon completion of the sale, you will receive an electronic invoice identifying lot(s) purchased and balance due.Ħ. DO NOT bid if you DO NOT intend to purchase.ĥ. Under no circumstances will bids be edited/cancelled. Online bid submissions are a legal binding contract, in which you agree to pay the amount you bid if you are the winning bidder. PLEASE CALL STEPHEN with any questions you may have concerning the bidding process.Ĥ. It is IMPORTANT to understand that lots 2.3.4.etc could close before lot 1, if bidding is still present on lot 1 but has ceased on 2.3.4.etc. This auction has a one-minute soft close in place, meaning lots will remain open for bidding until one minute has spanned with no bids, then the lot will officially close. MST, lots will begin to close in numerical order, one lot every twenty seconds. Preliminary bidding on lots will take place from 12 a.m. You will receive an email once your registration has been approved and you will then be able to place bids.ģ. This charge will be credited back to you. A $1.00 charge will be placed on your card for validation purposes only. A valid credit card is required to obtain a bidder number. Click on the "Register to Bid" tab and follow the directions. You MUST register for a bidder number to bid online, including those who have permanent bidder numbers for our on-site auctions. New registrations can be created by going to our website and then click on "Login/New Bidder" to the right of our logo.Ģ. You must create a HiBid account before you can register to bid on a specific auction. This online only auction uses the HiBid platform. It is contemplated that at least some aspects of the present technology could also be implemented with vehicles that have three, four, or more wheels.Auction Terms & Conditions 1. It reads, in part, “the present technology will be described herein with respect to a motorcycle. While all the drawings that BRP filed with this patent application depict a two-wheeled motorcycle, the text of the patent application indicates that BRP also considers this design applicable to vehicles with more than two wheels. (Just take a look at the complex anti-dive systems that the Japanese manufacturers came up with for certain of their telescopic fork bikes in the 1980s, and note that none of them lasted beyond a few years at most.) By swapping out a traditional telescopic fork design, BRP says, the type of front suspension geometry in play in this design would better be able to account for anti-dive characteristics. The wheelbase appears to be slightly lengthy, but it’s difficult to say for sure without any measurement figures (which wouldn’t typically be provided at this stage in development, anyway).īRP’s reasoning for the development of this design is that elusive thing that motorcycle OEMs have been trying to combat for decades now: Brake dive. The rear end of the motorcycle similarly uses another single-sided swingarm and almost horizontally-placed monoshock. Instead, it features a single-sided swingarm, which is attached to a single shock that attaches that swingarm to the frame, just ahead of the handlebars. The design, which BRP has provided 20 total detailed drawings to illustrate, depicts the front of a motorcycle that does not use any type of fork, be it conventional or upside-down. It was officially published by the USPTO on December 29, 2022-and while the title itself is as understated as many patent applications typically are, it appears to show an interesting potential future development for Can-Am motorbikes, trikes, and potentially other vehicles. Back in 2020, Bombardier Recreational Products applied for a patent with the very simple title, “Front Suspension Assembly for a Vehicle” with the US Patent and Trademark Office.
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