If only my bike had space for a bumper-sticker saying that!some people know the price of everything and the value of nothing.
If only my bike had space for a bumper-sticker saying that!some people know the price of everything and the value of nothing.
Yes indeed .. it's very clinical just to look at this in terms of car vs. bike costs but I'm one of those who has ditched the car. I got rid of it about a month ago now. It was 5 years old £13k when new, and had to top up what it fetched to buy the bike. Not expecting to save money over the 1st year on insurance or depreciation at all. However, I'm saving a fortune in parking, parking tickets and fuel especially on short trips around town. If I have to travel further afield by train then as long as it's irregular the costs are roughly the same as using the car provided it's not in peak times.For those who get rid of a car and buy an e-bike instead, the savings are very real, but anyone buying an e-bike as well as keeping the car in the hope of cutting overall transport costs is doomed to disappointment. That just makes life more costly.
How very true. I find being a car passenger even worse. Spent all of a trip home from a day out last weekend wishing I was cycling home instead .E Biking is pleasure driving is a pain
Yes indeed .. it's very clinical just to look at this in terms of car vs. bike costs but I'm one of those who has ditched the car. I got rid of it about a month ago now. It was 5 years old £13k when new, and had to top up what it fetched to buy the bike. Not expecting to save money over the 1st year on insurance or depreciation at all. However, I'm saving a fortune in parking, parking tickets and fuel especially on short trips around town. If I have to travel further afield by train then as long as it's irregular the costs are roughly the same as using the car provided it's not in peak times.
The biggest consequence of getting the bike is that I've completely changed my horizons and lifestyle on account of having it. Used to take the car here, there and everywhere around the country every week with astronomic fuel bills, and drive way too tired to avoid cost of nights away. Sometimes the travel was for work (changed that too as part of it all) but mostly for recreation. So I've scaled down the range of things I do and found new things too (aside from the bike itself which is always a recreation even on necessary trips ). Most cost fractions of what I used to spend, so the indirect savings from the lifestyle change are enormous.
It was also far too easy to drive to the airport and pop abroad for a couple of days, roughly once a month. I can't reconcile the costs and time-inefficiency of getting to airports on public transport now so haven't bothered. Getting rid of the car has forced me to look locally for what is on my doorstep and make the most of that instead. It might not suit forever but for at least a year I'm going to stick with it and there's loads to keep me interested.
In short, the amount of money I won't spend by having a car to jump into and hair off in is very considerable. Not to mention the eye-watering tobacco bill I'm saving myself as driving brought on an incurable urge to smoke. I can still get a lift if I really need one, within reason, which is nice as I've spent years giving free lifts to other people.
Variable financial costs of bike vs car ownership = no brainer.
Indirect benefits of bike = incalculable
How very true. I find being a car passenger even worse. Spent all of a trip home from a day out last weekend wishing I was cycling home instead .
Enjoy the "Golden Age" .. at least someone's getting a good run at it. I've little doubt there will be no such pleasures for my generation (40 is creeping up fast but not there yet, so I've a good way left to go before retirement is on the cards ) .. truth is lots of us have had a pretty good time of it during our younger years. I guess there's only so much to go round in a lifetime and for my own part I'm glad of having been able to travel and enjoy so much of life at an age when I can get the most out of it. Not getting married and having kids in one's 20s certainly helped !Although, overall, the economics are good, the other benefits which I consider to be direct rather than indirect, are as described.
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Ebike, bus pass, judiciously selected rail travel and learning how to fly with only hand luggage on budget airlines......all put together, the world is one's whelk and that has to be the way to go for older people.
After seeing yesterday's headline suggesting older people should be forced to work for their pensions, I'm left to wonder how much longer this "golden age" can last so I think we older ones should enjoy it all while we still have the opportunity. Incidentally, I thought I had already done the work and earned my right to a pension.
Indalo
No need to. UK speed limits only apply to motor vehicles, and e-bikes are classed as bicycles, exempt from most motor vehicle laws. Very few of these cameras are able to pick up a cyclist anyway, I've never been able to trigger one, even at more than 50% above the limit downhill.having to brake for the speed camera at the foot of the hill on the edge of town .. priceless
Interesting Hatti,One cheap solution to control cost is long term rental from Woosh.
Minimum rental is 2 months.
We rent out Woosh Monos for £30 per month, suitable for very short daily commute, up to 6 miles/day (eg to railway stations). For longer commute, up to 12 miles/day Woosh Siroccos for £45 per month.
Delivery of your bike costs £17 if needed.
Hatti
Hi John,Interesting Hatti,
Do you have many rental customers and what about insurance, is that included?
Regards,
Start a new thread about it - tacked on to the end of this one it'll be buried and overlooked.Can I up grade my CB26 IZIP so it will go at a much faster speed.if so what would I need and what would be the cost please.
I'm new to E Bikes have only bought my second hand one about a month ago.
If you're self-employed or running a business bike lease/rental makes a lot of sense as it's tax deductible, maybe not fully though if you're using the bike for personal use as well as work.One cheap solution to control cost is long term rental from Woosh.
Minimum rental is 2 months.
We rent out Woosh Monos for £30 per month, suitable for very short daily commute, up to 6 miles/day (eg to railway stations). For longer commute, up to 12 miles/day Woosh Siroccos for £45 per month.
Delivery of your bike costs £17 if needed.
Hatti
A lot of the responses seem to miss the point; the original post was about costs "if you need to keep the car". Frankly, if you are not replacing a car then an E-bike does not make financial sense. That does not stop it being a sensible purchase; just that you need different criteria to "justify" your purchase.What about depreciation of car, insurance,road tax ?
Assuming 40 mpg (highly unlikely) the fuel alone is £300 so really dont see where you are getting 20p a mile from ? (AA figures are usually at least 40p a mile even for a small car).
Of course your average per mile in car is almost certainly based on the fact that you do far more than 2000 miles a year in the car so spreading these other costs over more miles ?
How do the figures stack up if you assume that you only do 2000 miles a year in car ?
so full years depreciation,tax,insurance,servicing and fuel for 2000 miles all count ?
By the way I do agree that if already have the expense of running a car that there is no/limited real savings in owning a ebike but feel your figures dont show the whole picture and will vary enormously from one person to another.
Ah but that was my point he did not make that clear.A lot of the responses seem to miss the point; the original post was about costs "if you need to keep the car". Frankly, if you are not replacing a car then an E-bike does not make financial sense. That does not stop it being a sensible purchase; just that you need different criteria to "justify" your purchase.
To be fair, the first line of the origonal post is "If you need to retain a car there isn't one !" which is pretty clear. Not that that stopped me from missunderstanding the post as well.Ah but that was my point he did not make that clear.