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eBikes have become very popular in Europe - I imagine moms pedaling kids to school make good use of the extra power. Bikes can also be a primary source of transportation to get to the grocery store, run errands, etc. In addition, there are people that wouldn't otherwise be able to put as many miles in due to chronic injury or illness but still want to get out on a bike. I agree, we need to be careful about bikes hitting 20+ mph, especially bikes that can hold 20+ mph but I think it wouldn't be such a bad idea to see how Europe is handling the issue - do they have speed regulation? Do they have wider paths/lanes for bikes? Are pedestrians typically sharing paths with cyclists?
Ebikes certainly have their place. But if they're going 20 miles an hour, that place is in the street. All those ebikes in the European Union, uniformly, are limited to speeds 25% slower than the ones being approved in the U.S., with correspondingly lower-powered motors. That makes a big difference. Even so, the evidence is accumulating that ebikes, proportionately, are involved in more and worse accidents than bicycles. Finally, the speed of ebikes is a slippery slope. The lobbies already are already pushing, and will continue pushing, for ever more powerful motors and speed capabilities. It won't stop at 20 m.p.h., that's for sure.
We already know the answers to these questions. In the EU, max. speed is 15.6 mph, and max. power is 250W. Rarely are pedestrians and cyclists sharing the same paths where I have ridden in NW Europe.
Here we have many more shared paths, and the ebikes can go faster. Neither is good.
disclaimer: i haven't read anything anyone has said :D
comment: I just learned that in Amsterdam, moped-like vehicles can drive/ride in the cycle-paths--though there's a power/speed limit!
opinion: ehhh i don't know how i feel about it. maybe it works there...maybe it wouldn't work as well over here.
It's annoying when kids on motorbikes pass very close to you on a bike path. But most people in Amsterdam are very experienced cyclists, and they don't get shaken by it. Over here it would be terrifying, as both cyclists and motorcyclists are much less skilled.
E-bikes have a place for assisting those that may need it, but the throttles need to go. If someone need some assistance with hills, or just maintaining momentum due to a number of any issues, great they are out riding. A throttle however does turn in onto a moped. limit the motor output and take away the throttle and no one will know the difference, besides looks.
Make it 15 m.p.h. like the EU, no throttle, and we might have a deal. I'd like 10 or 12 better.
Thanks for clarifying the legal perspective . I don't want to dominate this post , but discussion and advocacy needs to happen.
I fear that the law will not favor the class 3 speed pedelecs and they will get combined with the class 4 and essentially get treated like a motorcycle. You mentioned liability for a Grace One that could be riding 30mph. That is not much different than a turbo going 28. Once the lawmakers realize that speed pedelecs are skirting the 20mph law, they will get all safety/legal tight and regulate them. No?
What is happening with class 1 and 2 is fine and covered under the fed law. The debate for 20-30mph bikes is on the table.
I hate the idea of regist, turn lights and licenses for an 800w ebike, required to stay off bike paths and the road only. It will kill effective ebike commuting.
Stealth fighter and Optinike R11 are both in this emoped category.
So again, I hope Larry Pizzi and the ebike committee reads this:
PLEASE add a class and make class 4 for ebikes beyond the 20 mph, throttle only, 750w. Class 4 should be considered high powered ebikes , call them emopeds. Cap them at 1200w and 35mph. Require front and rear lights, no turn . Recommend all class 1-4 allowed on bike trails, subject to local speed limits , for commuting purposes.
I stop and watch/listen.
You actually want 35 m.p.h. vehicles allowed on bike trails? This constant push for speed escalation is what will happen when they are allowed there at all. Bike paths are not highways.
Honestly, Electric bikes are least of my problems.
I shared the gap between traffic and parked cars with a Motorcycle yesterday and sometimes I see people with Mopeds who think bike lanes belong to them as well.
What we really need is better bike lane enforcement overall.
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