I meant EAPC laws as a whole, not only in relation to 250W limit.How is that a mess? We don't have to worry about how the motor is rated. That's between the manufacturer and the regulating authorities.
I meant EAPC laws as a whole, not only in relation to 250W limit.How is that a mess? We don't have to worry about how the motor is rated. That's between the manufacturer and the regulating authorities.
Your vivid imagination was shared by Russia during the cold war. Outsiders with visas could drive or motorcycle into Russia, but pedal cycles were completely banned from entry since they needed no fuel so couldn't be tracked by any means.As I have a vivid imagination, I can see the possibility that in 10 years time ordinary pedal bicycles becoming illegal because they can't be tracked.
On the matter of ebike battery fires; I suspect that the vast majority of them occur when naive users plug higher voltage chargers into batteries. I have not tried it, but I expect plugging a 48 v or 52v charger into a 36 volt battery would likely result in extreme heating of the battery and a likely fire. There is also the possible failure of the charger voltage control circuit if it is badly made, but probably far less likely than stupid abuse such as using a higher voltage charger.Among other things, fears expressed about batteries being larger, making ebike battery fires even harder to extinguish. Given the choice, people will choose a legal 500W over 250W. Battery failure rates within what passes for a warranty period will be higher if they use the same cheap Chinese cells to power those 500W motors using higher amped controllers - I hope this will force manufacturers of cheap ebikes to use more genuinely capable ebike batteries, but I expect they won't.
Less likely, but it'd be a bigger fire?As for a larger battery being more dangerous...... Notionally maybe, but in practice why would a 750 watt/hour battery be more likely to ignite than a 450 watt hour one? No battery fire is a good outcome. A 450 watt hour battery will set your kitchen on fire as well as a bigger one.
I suspect consumers may want a 500w ebike in future so manufacturers and retailers will rebadge their bikes for the UK market as 500wAll that's happening is that they want to make the temporary regulations for those scooters permanent, which will loosen the regulation of pedal assisted vehicles regarding power and control system, but they might have to introduce other rules about traceable ownership or battery certification to alay fears from the general public.
It is not the battery capacity that is the problem. Motors with 500W rating will draw more Amps and this is where problems will start. Get right battery with good quality cells and all should be fine, but I see where corners could be cut and risk of fire increased.As for a larger battery being more dangerous...... Notionally maybe, but in practice why would a 750 watt/hour battery be more likely to ignite than a 450 watt hour one? No battery fire is a good outcome. A 450 watt hour battery will set your kitchen on fire as well as a bigger one.
I suspect consumers may want a 500w ebike in future so manufacturers and retailers will rebadge their 250w bikes for the UK market as 500wAll that's happening is that they want to make the temporary regulations for those scooters permanent, which will loosen the regulation of pedal assisted vehicles regarding power and control system, but they might have to introduce other rules about traceable ownership or battery certification to alay fears from the general public.
I believe that most of the cells made are made in China. It is by far the biggest cell manufacturer. Many of the well known cell manufacturers are making their cells in China, probably because they are pretty near to having a monopoly on large scale lithium extraction and refining.Less likely, but it'd be a bigger fire?
I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong about the following: The cells in a smaller capacity cell pack outputting 15A will do so at a higher temperature, than if they were in a larger battery pack composed of the same cell type outputting 15A. Manufacturers of cheap Chinese ebikes we see all over Amazon etc. tend to use batteries made with cheap Chinese cells, which may have slight differences in cell chemistry, because quality control wasn't stringent and they were manufactured in a different batch on a different date - it wouldn't surprise me if these cheap battery packs simply increased in size to more reliably produce higher continuous amps for 500W motors, but the increased numbers of cells increases the likelihood of one or more badly manufactured or mismatched cells failing, causing a short and igniting.
Hard to say, this isn't what happened with the S-class High Speed pedelecs.I suspect consumers may want a 500w ebike in future so manufacturers and retailers will rebadge their 250w bikes for the UK market as 500w
That's interesting, I wasn't suggesting they would make any changes to the UK market bikes, they would be identical but rated and stamped 500w instead of 250wHard to say, this isn't what happened with the S-class High Speed pedelecs.
They originally had the identical 250 watts rating but without any restriction could only just top 32 kph (20mph), far short of the permitted 45kph (28mph).
So the authorities increased the rating to 500 watts to deal with that issue and manufacturers rushed out 500 watt machines. But the market decided otherwise since range suffered too much, so now almost all S-class bikes actually use 350 watt rated motors, being the best compromise between performance and range.
That could easily happen with the new regulation here, especially since most e-scooters already have 350 watt motors and 350 watt standard pedelecs are already made for other countries.
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I doubt that though, professional reviews alone would expose no change in the power and performance and consumers would react critically.That's interesting, I wasn't suggesting they would make any changes to the UK market bikes, they would be identical but rated and stamped 500w instead of 250w
I agree. It's also badgersIt isn't the bike, car, dog or sharp tool that is the problem
why would I want to voluntarily step into a minefield? In a medium term, we are expected to get closer to the EU (whatever that means, as far as I am aware, 99.9% our regulations haven't diverged from the EU) so I don't expect our pedelecs regulations to diverge other than what the police will be instructed to ignore such as the full acting throttle even on factory made bikes.Can we have your opinion on this subject please?
Maybe the minister got nudged by the e-scooter vendors.Which forumites have responded to this consultation?