![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEguwz8Nz62etHlWqUgayTUFMSsLKmg8YxefIzOIY5T8PFALRtYSM049e-x4ALaqN2oVtIylh2DXPWDFrLGjtITV2_TUxGcMwje3ZjsjO0g3CyY9herExoLEFCXcI9r6V4O8z9R8e-ohLlQ/s320/Monster+Motorbike+For+Motor+Show.jpg)
Powered by a Detroit Diesel truck engine, mated to a 6-speed Allison automatic, this thing stands almost 9 metres/ 29.5ft long and more than 3 metres/ 9.8ft high. In fact, as seen in these pics, a full grown man doesn’t even stand up to one of the Monster Motorbike’s wheels. Caterpillar provided these wheels straight from their front-end loader, a beast on its own, used to terrorizing the earth in all manner of sorts.
"We did stunt driving for quite a few years, broke a few records and broke my back a few times, so this is a way of taking a bit more care," says Baumann.
"Now we crush things, which is definitely less risky than jumping them - we still do jump things, but not at the Melbourne Motor Show."
The thrill it appears, comes from rolling over smaller objects like school buses or trucks like a Ford’s F 150 for instance.
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