Kids’ bikes have quietly evolved. Parents want balance and coordination training, schools want safer fleets, and retailers ask for components that survive real-world knocks. This model from Hebei—made in Dongmiao Industrial Zone, Hegumiao Town, Pingxiang County, Xingtai City—lands right in that sweet spot. It blends a Hi-Ten carbon steel frame, proper argon-arc welding, and removable auxiliary wheels (yep, “four-wheel” stability when you need it) for riders roughly 5–10 years old. I’ve seen plenty of flashy paint jobs over the years; this one backs the look with solid engineering.
Three trends keep popping up: durable frames (schools hate maintenance downtime), wider tires for confidence, and modularity—training wheels off, then on, then off again. The Exercise Balance Coordination Kids Bike High Ten Carbon Steel 5-10 Years Old Four Wheels Kids Bicycle checks those boxes with a 38 mm shock-absorber fork and Giller 2.35” brown-edge tires that look cool and track steady on park paths.
| Wheel sizes | 18/20/22 inches (≈ 5–10 yrs; real-world fit may vary) |
| Frame | Hi-Ten carbon steel, argon arc welded; environmentally friendly paint with cut-color inner stickers |
| Fork | 38 mm shock absorber, anode color sleeve |
| Rims | Double-layer CNC new wheel rim |
| Tires / Tubes | Giller 2.35 outer tire; Giller butyl rubber inner tube |
| Bearings | Four-track bearings across the vehicle; colorful Peilin flower hub |
| Seat | Thickened, high-elasticity saddle |
| Brakes | V-brake / band-brake configurations available (market-dependent) |
| Colors | Green, Sky Blue, Pink Purple, Rice White |
School commutes, weekend park loops, beginner skills courses—this bike is built for that. The detachable training wheels make the “four wheels” setup perfect for the first month or two, then off they go. Many customers say the wider tires and cushy seat calm the wobbles. To be honest, that’s half the battle when kids move up from balance bikes.
| Factor | DH Electric Kid Car (Hebei) | Generic Importer A | Budget Marketplace B |
| Frame/Weld | Hi-Ten, argon arc, consistent beads | Hi-Ten, mixed welding | Unknown grade, spot welding in areas |
| Bearings | Four-track across hubs/crank | Standard ball bearings | Basic bushings in places |
| Compliance | Designed to align with ISO/CPSC/EN testing | Partial claims | Unclear |
| Warranty | Structured (ask for terms) | Limited | Minimal |
A regional after-school program piloted 60 units of the Exercise Balance Coordination Kids Bike High Ten Carbon Steel 5-10 Years Old Four Wheels Kids Bicycle. Over a 6‑month season, maintenance tickets reportedly dropped ≈ 22% vs. their prior fleet, largely due to the double-wall rims and better hubs. Kids moved off the training wheels faster than expected—anecdotal, yes, but echoed by instructors.
The manufacturer cites alignment with ISO 4210 methodologies for frame/fork fatigue, EN 14765 concepts for children’s bicycle safety, and CPSC 16 CFR Part 1512 for U.S. import scenarios. Always verify market-specific labeling (reflectors, bell, instruction manual), and ask for current test reports or third-party lab certificates before bulk orders. It seems basic, but it saves headaches.
References:
[1] ISO 4210: Safety requirements for bicycles (relevant parts and test methods)
[2] EN 14765: Bicycles — Safety requirements for bicycles for young children
[3] CPSC 16 CFR Part 1512: Requirements for bicycles
[4] EN 71-3 / REACH guidance for coatings (where applicable to child-contact materials)