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Partha Saha, 39, bought an old bike from a scrap dealer, removed the engine and cut the machine in two before affixing a rod slightly longer than a meter (3.2 feet) to connect the wheels.
“Now I can ride with my eight-year-old daughter while maintaining a safe distance,” he told AFP from Agartala in the northeastern state of Tripura.
Like other countries, the Indian government has imposed a nationwide lockdown and urged citizens to practice social distancing to curb the spread of the virus.
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“I didn’t want her to take the school bus as it would be crowded,” said Saha, who works in a TV repair shop.
His new bike runs on battery power and has a top speed of 40 kilometers per hour (25 mph).
“It takes three hours to charge the battery, which allows the bike to travel 80 kilometers. The cost of charging it once comes to about 10 rupees,” he said.
The mechanic has already tried out his invention on the streets, leaving onlookers stunned at the design and drawing praise from Biplab Kumar Deb, Tripura’s chief minister.
“Necessity is the mother of invention! I congratulate Partha Saha… for making a unique motorcycle to create awareness during COVID-19 pandemic,” Deb tweeted.