IMO, Goldwing Trike is a better option. Those wheels are a bad idea - they are working from the reverse. If you can't control your bike at slow speeds, you probably shouldn't be riding it...
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Well at that age you tend not to give a %#@t what other people think.
Also like what was said previously.... you still get to lean with these compared to a trike. Not saying these are the greatest solution. Damn near anything is better than NOT riding at all.[/quote]
Not to put too fine a point on this thread or be insensitive, but as an ex-EMT on an ambulance squad, I would not want to see my Dad riding on a dangerous contraption such as a Goldwing with traing wheels. A 'Wing is a MASSIVE machine - incapable of stopping quickly enough for aged reflexes. I know whereof I speak, having seen a 'Wing go down right behind me for nothing worse than having a startle reflex. This was a man in his late '30's riding in a group who let his attention wander. Heck, I went over the handlebars once myself because a moron in front of me jammed on his brakes and I locked the front brake in a reflex reaction. Lucky this was only a Honda 360. All it cost me was a busted collarbone. I got right back on a bike as soon as I could, so I KNOW fully what you want for your Dad - it's a good thing. But at some point, if we live long enough, we have to stop operating a motor vehicle lest we become a danger to ourselves or others.
Even at the best of times, under the best of circumstances, riding a bike is a risky business. Like they say in combat, "you got nothing to worry about except the bullet with your name on it". For your Dad's sake, you're doing a wonderful thing. But for everyone else's sake, try to get him to take up a safer sport such as sky diving. I've seen the police reports on accidents where the driver was cited for operating a motor vehicle with "diminished capacity". It doesn't feel so good to the driver when that happens, especially where someone was seriously hurt.
Keep the shiny side up - don't become a statistic.
Herb