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Tom, did you watch the video of this guy comparing his e-bike ride to a car trip? I'd like to hear your comments about the speeds he achieves in the marked bike lanes. Also, the study cited in the article compares e-bikes not to non-ebikes, but to e-bikes being ridden with the motor off. That's not a real-world comparison. Like a lot of blogs and studies, these were created by people heavily invested in one side and not the other. I have no problem with people riding e-bikes as fast as they want in the streets. I also have no problems with exemptions being made on trails and in bike lanes for people who would otherwise, because of age or infirmity, be incapable of riding unassisted, or even stressed by it. I do have a problem with the inevitable group of people who would go way too fast on trails with e-bikes. There's already a whole culture evolving concerning overriding speed restrictions on e-bikes. To wit: https://www.ebiketuning.com/ and dozens of other sites like it. Do you really think it's OK to ride 30 miles an hour in unprotected, unbuffered bike lanes and paths in urban areas? There has to be some give-and-take on both sides. I'm willing to concede to an extent on the lanes and trails, but there need to be speed concessions on the other side. And I don't care how stupidly fast some people are pedaling bikes on crowded lanes and paths already. They're wrong and should be stopped as well. Two wrongs don't make a right.
P.S. I'm sure that you, in particular, would ride your e-bike on any lane and trail with great civility and cause no problems whatsoever. But you, and most people on this forum, are not necessarily typical from my experience as a cyclist.
Three grand? I have to admit I was looking at e-bikes on CL and I just saw some near Milwaukee, Trex FX+ e-bikes, used for a really low price. Probably showroom or demo models. I was tempted. I'm saving an old Trek Multitrack 730, a bike I love, to convert to an e-bike when the day comes. If I make it that far! There are some really cool conversion kits out there.
FYI - There have been some bike-on-bike crashes on the lakefront trail that involved serious injury. It's not common, but it happens. Occasionally there are other types of crashes, like a person getting launched by a dog leash stretched across the path, or an errant volleyball landing in front of them by North Ave. Beach. Freakishly rare, but I know people who have crashed in all these scenarios.
Unfortunately, there are crashes on LFP and they are a lot more common than you think. It's a congested path only made worse when bikes speed through the busiest sections. Back in the 90s, I got hit from behind by a cyclist who was speeding through a crowded section and passing too closely (and wasn't calling "on your left"). It was also my fault - I was one of those people that didn't look to my left before I moved to the left. I had nerve damage in both elbows for years, got scraped up pretty badly, and learned a valuable lesson about being careful on the LFP. Some are not so lucky.
I like to ride on the LFP but if I am in a crowded section, I slow down. I do see people fly by me on their bikes.
The freakishly rare part was referring to very serious injuries. I see plenty of minor crashes and near misses.
Yasmeen - Sorry to hear about the nerve damage from your crash. Yours and all the other crashes are good reasons to slow down when it's crowded.
Your correct. The problem is really that once you allow e-bikes you allow for people to really behave badly. To pedal fast you have built up skills to handle that bicycle. Anybody can jump on a motorized bike. I own an e-bike. I bought it for my now deceased father to assist pedal up hills which became harder in his eighties.
Let me tell you - nobody really pedals these things. They are in many senses un-licensed versions of mopeds. And once you allow them be prepared as they get better and cheaper they will flood the bike paths & trails with users. Real cyclists will become the minority and might become marginalized just like what happened with paved roads when cars became cheap and affordable
I'd also would like to tell the OP that he is incorrect in his statement that they are legal on trails. I know they are not allowed on the IPP/Fox River Trail/Great Western Trail. I don't know of any trail that allows motorized vehicles around here - and that is what an e-bike is considered. Now I'm sure that there very well may be some that do allow them.
Especially in states like CA where electric bikes are more common. I've been a big trail activist for 40 years and I know that one much debated issue has been electric wheel chairs / mobility carts. This is a much more complex issue as the folks using these aren't going to be using them to go faster and cut off self propelled users. But they do cause other issues in fact because of their size and the dexterity of the users to manuever them and ability to react to other users. A majority of the suburban trails are limestone screened. This is because it is cheaper and easier to maintain than asphalt. It is also because of the horse riding contingent as horses don't like asphalt - hard on the hoofs. But wheelchair - electric scooter etc users want the asphalt as it is much more friendly to them. And these are just a couple issues. It is really much more complex than one might think and I find myself during these discussions with government officials and the other stake holders going back and forth. As trails get more crowded many of the problems start to resemble what you see on the roadway. Difference in speed become magnified. There has been a contingent in the suburban set and some government types pushing for speed limits. These are not aimed at the electric users but at many of the fast road riders that have discovered the trails as an alternative without cars for fast training rides. That is a conflict for the mom out on the trail pulling a wagon with a two year old in it followed by a 4 year old riding a bike with training wheels and a 6 year old riding a two wheeler and displaying the handling abilites a new to no training wheels rider is going to have. I have seen this accident happen when a guy doing what I would say was 25-27 mph came around a blind corner and plowed into them. It was bad. Now I'm a fast rider who can do a sub 4 hour century but I never ride faster than 20 on the trails and stay off them during the prime time for kids. I'm not a fan of speed limits (and enforcement would be highly selective at best) but you can see how complex regulating trails can get. Electric bikes are just beginning to be an item. As they grow in numbers they will become more of an issue. Many trails use federal money meant for lowering congestion/pollution on the roadways as well as money for more commuting options. Electric bike users could very well argue that they are part of lowering congestion/pollution as so if fed funds were used for a trail they then would be entitled to use that trail. Something that nobody would have thought of say 20 years ago. It will be interesting to see how this all sorts itself out over the next 20 years.
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