if you can use a throttle on an eScooter, should not the same apply to an eBike ?
No, the difference I've explained in my previous post number 13, that e-scooters are motor vehicles with all that implies in law. Legal pedelecs are classed as bicycles so not subject to motor vehicle laws.
This is all about the fact that pedelecs only have assist power and how that power is applied. The authorities desire very long ago that cycling should be encouraged more widely led to the realisation that some need assistance to do so, due to terrain variation, age etc.
So to achieve that without turning the bicycle into a form of motorcycle, the allowance of assist power had to be as close to normal cycling as possible. That meant the bicycle, even with assist power, can only be propelled by pedalling (so no fully acting throttle), the amount of assist power is limited to what humans are capable of and the powered speed be limited to within that of normal unassisted utility cycling.
The usual objection raised is to the assist speed limit, but this is almost uniquely a British objection due to the weird modern British habit since the 1980s of cycling at 20 mph or more like Tour de France wannabees. It never used to be this way. In the decades like the 1950s and before when cycling in Britain was so widespread that half the country cycled, it was utility cycling and they did it sitting upright and ambling along at typically around 10 mph. I know, I was there and in the trade. The rest of the world still cycles that way.
I've previously explained why British cycling became so different recently, it's a long story.
A recent example of how poorly 'voluntary' regulation is observed in the UK to do with roads occured recently in my area. Now when out out driving (urban area) there are often long queues of vehicles behind me, but none in front of me. Its now a 20mph speed limit everywhere and the observance rate on clear roads is close to nobody.
Equally my entire borough has long been 20 limited with only the main through roads at 30 limit.
What I've noticed though is that everyone observes the limits and always have done, but all only in a relative fashion. In the days when it was all 30 limited, most drove at nearer to 40mph and still do on the remaining 30 limit roads.
But on the majority of 20 limit roads they now drive at near to 30.
I think this is just human nature. We mostly find limits of any kind irksome so we push against them as far as we can get away with it, even our routine police patrols do exactly the same.
However, it doesn't really matter, since what the authorities desired has been achieved, almost all our motor traffic is now running 10 mph slower than they used to, so there's a genuine increase in safety. I bet it's similar where you are.
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