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He Built a Wearable Motorcycle Suit —The human tron bike man 🚵‍♂️

Watch as Jake zooooms

⚡ Meet Jake Carlini: The Man Who Wears His Motorcycle


What do you do after crashing your bike? Most people call insurance. Jake Carlini, on the other hand, decided to become the bike.


The viral YouTuber and content creator just unveiled his latest mad-science creation — a wearable electric motorcycle suit made entirely from repurposed bike parts, turning his body into a fully functioning machine that lets him ride in a planking position at speeds over 20 mph. Yeah… this man really built an Iron Man-meets-Tron contraption that you strap on and ride.


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🛠️ From Crash to Creation


After a serious crash left his electric bike wrecked, Jake didn’t scrap it — he salvaged every working part and decided to rebuild it… around himself.


Step one was the motor, built into the rear wheel. Instead of mounting it on a frame, Jake strapped the wheel directly to his legs using painter’s stilt braces. These held the wheel forks tight against his shins, locking his legs into the motor assembly like some futuristic exosuit.


Then came the battery. Too bulky for a regular setup, Jake cut and reinforced the back pocket of a vest to create a wearable power source. He glued, stitched, and customized the vest until it could safely hold the weight of the battery and wiring system — literally making his torso the bike’s energy hub.


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💡 Reinventing the Ride


Without handlebars or a seat, balance became the real challenge. So Jake engineered a custom steering system from leftover metal rods, bike pegs, and armrest pads — turning his upper body into a stabilizing system.


The throttle and display were rewired into the suit:


⚙️ Throttle on the right arm for acceleration


💡 Display hidden but accessible to track speed and power


🔌 Wires running along his arms and torso into the battery vest



It’s wearable engineering at its wildest — part vehicle, part performance art.




🏎️ Testing the Limits


When it was time to test, Jake discovered it wasn’t just about speed — it was about core strength. The planking position meant every muscle was working to stay balanced. To fix the instability, he widened the stilt straps for better leg support and added aero bars to shift his weight onto his arms.


The result?

A wearable electric motorcycle suit capable of hitting 20+ mph, powered by pure innovation (and a little insanity).



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♻️ Built From Scratch, Powered by Creativity


Every major component came from recycled bike parts:


Rear wheel motor 🌀


Throttle & display ⚡


Battery 🔋


Frame pieces 🔩


Painter’s stilt straps, pegs, aero bars, and glue 🧰



This wasn’t a million-dollar prototype — it was a DIY masterpiece built with grit, ingenuity, and YouTube curiosity.




🚀 The Future of “Wearable Machines”


Jake’s electric motorcycle suit blurs the line between fashion, engineering, and adrenaline. It’s not just a gadget — it’s a glimpse at what personal mobility could look like when creativity runs free.


Imagine a world where you don’t ride machines — you wear them. Jake Carlini’s experiment might just be the first chapter of that story.


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💬 Final Word:

Jake Carlini didn’t just rebuild his broken bike — he redefined what “riding” means.

No seat. No frame. Just man and machine moving as one.


And if this is where DIY innovation is heading, the future of tech is about to get a whole lot more wearable.

 
 
 

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