News1 min ago
Is riding a Segway scooter on a pavemen illegal?
23 Answers
http://tinyurl.com/5sco5f7
Should this person be charged for unlawfully riding this vehicle on the pavements, since driving an invalidity scooter isn't?
Should this person be charged for unlawfully riding this vehicle on the pavements, since driving an invalidity scooter isn't?
Answers
The simple rule for any motorized device is that the driver should have third party insurance. I don't know if invalidity scooters have to have insurance but I bet that segway had none.
21:37 Sat 15th Jan 2011
The Highway Act of 1835 renders the Segway PT illegal in the UK on pavements. They cannot be used where bicycles can (even electric bicycles) because they do not have pedals - and they cannot be used on the road as a motor vehicle because they do not meet any kind of permitted type approval in the UK. The only place they CAN be used is on private property (and only with the land owner's permission).
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I suppose the argument is that mobility scooters are a means of getting around for people who would otherwise find it difficult / impossible. As there are other European countries where it is not illegal, I suspect that any conviction / prosecution could be taken to the ECofHR.
After attending an interview at Cudworth police station he even got on his Segway and rode home through the streets.
A typical reaction of a Yorkshireman. Top bloke.
After attending an interview at Cudworth police station he even got on his Segway and rode home through the streets.
A typical reaction of a Yorkshireman. Top bloke.
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I don't know how fast these Segway vehicles go but I would have thought it illegal to use them on a public highway. I've seen them in use in the large shopping malls, and I think they are a useful idea for staff to get around an indoor area quickly. Jimi Heselden was our local hero for his charitable works, he was the millionaire owner of the Segway. He died recently riding on one of those things, falling down a cliff on one. Makes you think of the safety aspect of them in open spaces.
The only people who should be on pavements are pedestrians and mobility scooters.
As mentioned by boxtops the one's to look out for are those small persons on those mini-moke things and various 2 wheel and 4 wheel toys, those with plastic wheels are noisy beyond compare, also highly dangerous because apart from the BMXs and like, the other toys don't have brakes.
As mentioned by boxtops the one's to look out for are those small persons on those mini-moke things and various 2 wheel and 4 wheel toys, those with plastic wheels are noisy beyond compare, also highly dangerous because apart from the BMXs and like, the other toys don't have brakes.
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