That's a real trip down memory lane for me! Growing up as kids there was an early basic model hardtop saloon version (that blue van later variant is a new one for me) parked up in a front garden. Upon passing his bike test on an original Douglas Vespa (headlamp on the apron type), my pal's folks decided two wheels were dangerous.....three wheels better. So a deal was struck and the neglected Bond was returned to active duty. This must be around 1965. Shortcomings in the design were soon apparent. Starting was indeed with the kickstart, open the bonnet, one leg over the front valance, hope for the best.
It did have the cable start. An aluminium tube lever, pivoted on the floor was connected to the kickstart pedal with a steel cable. The cable connected to the lever at the hand gripped top end. The lever normally fell forward onto the toe board when not in use, the cable slack allowing the engine unit and wheel to pivot for steering. To start the engine, the steering was set to straight ahead, the lever raised, the cable tightened against the kickstart spring and with a few pulls it....
Started, or kicked back skinning your knuckles on the dashboard. Mostly it just sulked, and it was up with the bonnet to deliver a temper fueled kicking. Ours never ran backwards, but that would have been even more entertaining. The exhaust silencer pivoted with the engine, gases exiting under the passenger compartment, so carbon monoxide poisoning in slow moving or standstill traffic was another hazard.
The UK construction and use rules allowed three wheelers to be driven on a motorcycle licence, providing they were below a specified weight and no reverse gear. To achieve this everything was thin and flimsy, and they were built to a specific penny pinching market. We lads likened it as an eggshell on wheels and an accident waiting to happen. There was no driver's door, you sorta slid in over from the passenger side, onto a bench seat. We had great fun with it, particularly on wet grass or ice, where with no weight over the trailing rear wheels, with a footful of throttle it would break away and spin until the front wheel gripped and away you went in an unexpected direction. When finances improved it was sold on to another willing victim.
Swarfy.
PS. Bond cars were made by Sharps Commercials, later producing the Bond Equipe, a fibreglass bodied Triumph Herald based GT. They were later taken over by Reliant of Tamwoth, effectively removing the competition for three wheelers.