Thanks for coming in
@flecc, a useful addition to the debate. I note you stress the word "use" and see the point you're making.
However the link here....
Please note that the laws governing use of electric bikes on UK roads can be found here. In particular: Derestriction, ‘off-road’ switches or modes and dongles The Department of Transport say that electric bikes fitted with off-road switches or modes, that enable a bike’s motor to continue...
www.pedelecs.co.uk
....uses the phrase"
bikes fitted with off-road switches or modes". Note use of the word "fitted", implying that the mere fitment of an off-road switch (even if you don't use it) renders the bike illegal.
I'd welcome your (or anybody else's) thoughts, 'coz I'm confused!
Thanks for coming in
@flecc, a useful addition to the debate. I note you stress the word "use" and see the point you're making.
However the link here....
Please note that the laws governing use of electric bikes on UK roads can be found here. In particular: Derestriction, ‘off-road’ switches or modes and dongles The Department of Transport say that electric bikes fitted with off-road switches or modes, that enable a bike’s motor to continue...
www.pedelecs.co.uk
....uses the phrase"
bikes fitted with off-road switches or modes". Note use of the word "fitted", implying that the mere fitment of an off-road switch (even if you don't use it) renders the bike illegal.
I'd welcome your (or anybody else's) thoughts, 'coz I'm confused!
There are several relevant aspects:
First this is DfT guidance so not the law, and the DfT have been known to get their guidance wrong in the past. Note that this conflicts with their previous guidance saying use and not fitment and the use of button and/or switch is confusing
In a court only the law and its spirit of what parliament intended counts.
As a general rule in the UK it is not illegal for anyone to sell items which are illegal to use, hence we have sellers of various illegal vehicles like mini-motos and Segways, cars capable of speeds double and more our maximum limits. The UK legal custom is to specifically ban any item we really don't want sold, for example illegal drugs, certain types of guns and other weapons, and toys which are dangerous.
It follows that some thing legal to sell (despite being illegal to use) cannot of itself be illegal. Ergo, pedelecs with off road switches are not illegal and that DfT guidance is wrong. Someone must be caught riding the pedelec so equipped before they can be prosecuted. Then it becomes a matter for legal argument whether such a pedelec is illegal even when the defeat facility isn't used.
The outcome of that would depend in part on the wording of the 1983/2015 EAPC regulations and the wording of the exemption in 168/2013 EU (and now UK) law on type approval.
My opinion is that if sold as legal and legally compliant at point of delivery, a rider could not be successfully prosecuted if they hadn't used the defeat facility, since no intent is shown.
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