Kettler Kettrike Oceana Tricycle
Let little Henry accompany you down the street with the Kettrike Oceana tricycle from Kettler. Sporting a five-position Quick-Adjust frame with an easy step-through S-frame design, the trike starts small but can grow in small increments right along with your child (within reason, of course). The trike’s synthetic MaxXtread tires, meanwhile, roll smoothly down the street to create a quiet, stress-free ride. Perhaps the coolest feature for parents, however, is the parental control steering lock system, which locks the handlebars in place when you’re using the pushbar.
The trike also enhances your child’s safety by offering a low center of gravity and a device that limits the turn radius, which helps prevent your child from careening out of control or tipping around a corner. Other details include a four-position, adjustable, ergonomic high-back seat with a handhold; a high carbon-steel frame with a fade-resistant polyester powder-coated finish; and oversized, slip-resistant pedals. Tandem adaptable, the Oceana measures 25 inches wide by 21 inches tall.
Customer Reviews
We had this bike for a year now, and we love it. E ‘was easy to assemble and is sturdy. I was wondering if we lose the lock feature where you can lock the pedals and push the baby when they’re tired, but the bike with this feature are much more expensive. We do not lose this characteristic. Tricycles are used only for short distances in any case – so the children often do not get tired before you get home. When I tired the handle is sturdy and stable enough so that the bike you can push the handle to lift the front wheel and keep pushing. The most valuable feature is the sturdy handle – I watched while other mothers pushing tricycles with a whimpy handle, no handle at all, and it seems like a ton of work.
We bought this for our two years of birthday and he loves it. We use several times a week instead of a stroller to go to the park or grocery store. The parent handle is a lifesaver for when my son gets tired, I just push for a while ‘. Rarely lock the steering and just ask him to turn the wheel. If we resist him back a little bit ‘and then we can adjust the direction of his front wheel. This usually solves the problem of steering. This does not free wheel (where the vendor of stay even when the parent pushes), we are happy because it has an easier time pedaling. I heard the freewheeling, often causes a shift in the beginning when the kiddo starts pedaling, (often confusing), and was buying a much cheaper, without this feature. It ‘very well built and feels as if it will last 20 years. I wish it were a basket on the back, but for the price, I’m thrilled!
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