The Ryno uses gyroscopes and accelerometers to balance and drive. I’ve tried to learn how to ride a motorcycle before, and I found the Ryno easier and more intuitive. You sit down, lean into it, and ...
The RYNO is a one-wheeled electric vehicle that goes up to 10 mph. (RYNO Motors) The owner of Beaverton-based RYNO Motors says his offbeat electric vehicle resonates with people because it “looks like ...
When it comes to self-balancing personal transportation devices, it looks like the Solowheel, Honda U3-X, Uno and Segway could all be in for a little competition. Portland, Oregon-based RYNO Motors is ...
It takes a special kind of magic to make an electric one-wheeled motorcycle not terrifying to ride, and Ryno Motors has pulled it off. The microcycle, which has a single 25-inch motorcycle tire and ...
We've had the opportunity to ride some crazy contraptions over the years here at Engadget, like the skateboard-cum-tank Shredder and the self-balancing two-seater from GM called the EN-V. Today we ...
This amazing looking vehicle is best described as a cross between a Segway and a motorcycle. The mono-wheeled Ryno is a gyroscopic electric bike/scooter/mobility machine that is about to go into ...
You know you're on an eye-catching vehicle when people hurrying through Central Park on one of the coldest days of the year stop to take photos and ask, "What is that thing?" That thing, in this case, ...
Ryno Motors has shipped its first one-wheeled electric gyroscopic motorcycle to an international customer, but plans for mass production have been postponed. The Portland, Oregon, company has put a ...
When five people emailed Chris Hoffman to offer him $25,000 each for their own versions of his one-wheeled electric motorcycle, the RYNO, he knew he had a viable business on his hands. But rather than ...
Maybe mall security guards would get more respect if they trolled the food court on Rynos. Wired.com tested the contraption, a sort of love child between a Segway and a unicycle, and it found the ...