It is hard to respect laws which are widely regarded as being arbitrary and ill thought out. Such laws bring the whole legal framework into disrespect and lead to conversations such as those above : if I can break this law with impunity why shouldn't I break that one too. The pedelec laws are further undermined by the fairly frequent and apparently random changes that have been made over the last several years.
An example is the throttle thing : originally twist-and-go throttles were encouraged as a way of helping disabled people get into cycling. Then they were banned. Now they are back, but only on one specific bike model which has been through an expensive approvals procedure. This is clearly a daft situation.
Another example is the maximum 250W to be legal part, when this depends entirely on what the motor manufacturer decides to mark on the side of their motors. Anyone who has looked at the specifications knows that almost all "legal" setups can provide at least double and often treble the "legal" power until battery sag spoils the fun.
It won't get sorted out whilst we have governments (any party) obsessed with brexit and other tribal matters, so we'll have to muddle through as best we can.
An example is the throttle thing : originally twist-and-go throttles were encouraged as a way of helping disabled people get into cycling. Then they were banned. Now they are back, but only on one specific bike model which has been through an expensive approvals procedure. This is clearly a daft situation.
Another example is the maximum 250W to be legal part, when this depends entirely on what the motor manufacturer decides to mark on the side of their motors. Anyone who has looked at the specifications knows that almost all "legal" setups can provide at least double and often treble the "legal" power until battery sag spoils the fun.
It won't get sorted out whilst we have governments (any party) obsessed with brexit and other tribal matters, so we'll have to muddle through as best we can.