Jump to content

Peter rehra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 7Sidz (talk | contribs) at 13:01, 27 July 2014 (typo, space). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A Peter Rehra as commonly seen on village Roads in Punjab. Notice the buffalo in its hold.

Peter rehra, ਪੀਟਰ ਰੇਹੜਾ [1] is a homemade vehicle used in rural Punjab. It is made by assembling a diesel engine,[2](mostly meant for pumping water), removing the pumpset assembly from it, and joining it with a framework made steel angles and wooden planks, and finally completing it all by putting four movable wheels, two are steerable (like in all vehicles) and the two rear ones directly attached to the engine via a primitive gear-assembly.[3] It is, of course, not meant for high-performance, but for sheer-economy, as it is easily able to carry twenty to twenty five grown-up people (plus their luggage), but mostly cannot move at more than 25 km/h. There has been instances when police themselves used this to carry a whole Maruti 800 (which they could not drive out of court orders)[4]

Though it is not technically recognized by the Government as a legal-vehicle, its use is quite common, mainly due to the high demand for public transport and lack of proper bus and train routes, especially to underdeveloped parts of the province.

The name has originated from "Petter", a brand of small diesel engines imported to India in early 1960s.

It is also known as Gharruka(ਘੜੁੱਕਾ) or Maruta(ਮਾਰੂਤਾ) - the male version of Maruti 800 car by maruti-suzuki partnership in India

References