grovel, grovelBy the way, my comments about the Police probably not being aware of the throttle law was not meant to be in any way disparaging. I have great respect for our boys in blue.
grovel, grovelBy the way, my comments about the Police probably not being aware of the throttle law was not meant to be in any way disparaging. I have great respect for our boys in blue.
Yes, a newsletter sent by Juicy Bikes this week confirmed this news. They have quite a few bikes that fulfill this condition as must other retailers. It looks like the throttle is going to live on a little longer than was expected!According to advice we sought from BAGB members (The Bicycle Association of Great Britain) bikes landed in the UK before this year can legally be sold with a full 15mph throttle. Bikes which arrive in the UK this year must adhere to the new rules.
Happy New Year all!
David
David, is this their (BAGB members') interpretation of the law or they have had some correspondence with the DfT? How the dealer or the police are going to know if a bike is imported before certain date?According to advice we sought from BAGB members (The Bicycle Association of Great Britain) bikes landed in the UK before this year can legally be sold with a full 15mph throttle. Bikes which arrive in the UK this year must adhere to the new rules.
Happy New Year all!
David
Where did you read that? The version I have seen does not mention that. It does mention that power must cut off as soon as the rider stops pedalling.Brake lever power cutoff are a requirement of EN15194...I note that some of my bikes,with EN15194,have a brake cutoff built into only the rear brake line.
KudosDave
Thanks Sherman, there are quite a few differences here in the UK. We had enjoyed independent throttles until now, but have now lost them unless the pedelec is type approved. The Transport Department have indicated they will treat them as pedelecs if type approved and all other pedelec law is complied with.I'm writing this from Finnish point of view, but we are both in EU so it might interest you.
The new law kicked in here too. Before the new law throttles were not allowed and it was max 250W, the usual EU pedelec law. But now L1e-A allows max 1kW, throttles or whatever (no need to pedal), max 25 kph. It does require insurance but not registeration. Also, type approval is not needed for single, "unique" pieces (which means DIY bikes, imports by private person). I'm not sure if no need for registeration or type approval are national exemptions though. I recall seeing a slide somewhere saying registeration will not be required in Finland as an exemption..
At the same time Segways, hover boards etc were legalized
edit typo: type approval is not needed for single, "unique" pieces
We should copy everybody but ourselves! It's difficult to find a nation without some better law than us in transport areas.we should copy the Finns ASAP.
Happy New Year,According to advice we sought from BAGB members (The Bicycle Association of Great Britain) bikes landed in the UK before this year can legally be sold with a full 15mph throttle. Bikes which arrive in the UK this year must adhere to the new rules.
Happy New Year all!
David
SGS Shanghai EN 15194 certificates....I have loads of them...Where did you read that? The version I have seen does not mention that. It does mention that power must cut off as soon as the rider stops pedalling.
Don't you think that the Chinese have been over zealous in their interpretation of EN1594? I have read some Chinese copies and some of them are very amusing. I don't have the spare 74 € to buy the actual text (in French in my case) but I am pretty sure that brake cut off is an option not an obligation - Cyclotek seems to think so in any case "not needed on modern bicycles".SGS Shanghai EN 15194 certificates....I have loads of them...
KudosDave
SGS Shanghai EN 15194 certificates....I have loads of them...
KudosDave
Most are awful, but the low powered version of the Renault Twizy to fit the VSP market is rather different and a much higher standard. Cheaper too.My favorite victims for ultimate downhill humiliation There aren't many around here though, too many hills.
Sorry the 4 kW four wheelers I am talking about
Yep. EN15194 gives a distance limit on motor overun after the pedals have stopped being turned. On a responsive system there is no requirement for brake cut offs.The French have and make pedelecs without brake cutouts, but like us they were the first to sign up to EN15194. So I doubt that requires brake cutouts.
.
Thanks Bob, I'd forgotten about that provision.Yep. EN15194 gives a distance limit on motor overun after the pedals have stopped being turned.
Hi Bob,Happy New Year...re throttles....I understand we are now on import date not used by date. How do the police determine the import date for a particular bike,I have no requirement to determine which particular bike was imported on a particular date....the bottom bracket numbers are selected at random,there is no date involved and we don't always send bikes immediately they are built....some bikes sell slower than others.Yep. EN15194 gives a distance limit on motor overun after the pedals have stopped being turned. On a responsive system there is no requirement for brake cut offs.
You can look it up or ask BAGB Tech support (a copy of EN15194 costs more than a few quid !).
That would be a nightmare of a job and pointless,we are only interested in the frame numbers at the point of sale. Why are you interested in the landing date?We keep a record of frame numbers as they arrive in the UK and have an audit trail back through the system for quality control. If you dont have a record of frame numbers then Iˋm not sure how you would otherwise prove the landing date.
Keeping a close track has had many benefits and now means we don't have to reconfigure controllers on bikes we have yet to build - phew!