What are the five types of vehicles?
2 Answers
Five types of vehicles refer to electric vehicles, tricycles, motorized wheelchairs for the disabled, modified vehicles, assembled vehicles, scrapped vehicles, etc. The five types of vehicles are those without license plates, certificates, or insurance, meaning they lack formal procedures. When driving a car on the road, not only must the procedures be complete, but the driver must also have a driver's license; otherwise, it is considered driving without a license. For a car to be driven on the road, it must have legal procedures, including obtaining a license plate, purchasing insurance, and passing an annual inspection before driving. There are two types of insurance required for a car: compulsory traffic insurance, which is mandatory by the state, and commercial insurance.
Having been in this field for a while, the classification of the five types of vehicles is quite clear to me. First are the over-spec electric bicycles—they run fast but have poor brakes, commonly ridden by delivery guys. Second are fuel-powered mopeds, especially those unlicensed small motorcycles that young people love to speed on, which is very dangerous. Third are tricycles, some for hauling goods and others for carrying passengers, with unstable bodies prone to tipping over. Fourth are modified motorized wheelchairs for the disabled—originally meant to help the disabled, but some are converted into mini-trucks and overloaded. Fifth are other illegally assembled vehicles, like knock-off electric bikes or motorcycles rebuilt from scrapped parts. Why are these classified as the five types? Because they often violate traffic rules—driving without licenses, occupying lanes, running red lights—with alarmingly high accident rates. My advice is to pay more attention to police safety notices when going out and choose regular vehicle types to protect yourself and others.