Allow me to Google this for you:It might help if you provide links.
Because it might be helpful?Why should we have to do all the searching, when OP, knows where the stuff is.
I am sure it is not intended but your post sounds really bad tempered. Nobody is asking you to look through 19 pages if you don't want toWhy should we have to do all the searching, when OP, knows where the stuff is.
I just wasted my time scrolling through the first page of your first link. There's not a single Ebike item. How many more pages do I have to search through to find what he's talking about? The seller has 19 pages of items!
And didn't raise the issue until well after the event, when it was too late to have the bike checked.. One bad loser, who's totally full of crap, as shown by his previous posts, has accused them of cheating without a shred of justification.
The real problem with passing a Lycra clad skelf on a light bike is, you just know that at the top of the hill, when it flattens out, he or she is going to flying passed you. One Lycra clad racing snake went flying passed me just before the top of a long hill. Once onto the flat he was soon out of sight. If I meet him again, I might invite him down to Bristol next year.Those EAPC riders who brag about speeding past 'roadies', usually uphill, are really pretty sad as they just don't seem to 'get' what electrically-assisted cycling is about.
Tom
I must confess to feeling some exhilaration when overtaking roadies on a hill, but I don't consider myself as sad, so perhaps I one of those who don't "get" what e-biking is all all about! My view is that riding e-bikes is just the same as riding any other bike, or riding anything for that matter, its totally up to you what you do with it. There is no "about" about it, and they are definitely not reserved for any niche of riders who frown on a bit of tom foolery here and there! (no pun or offence intended)Why people choose to race EAPCs is beyond me; it kind of misses the point.....big time!
If people want to race bikes, they can do that using identical pushbikes with nothing but their own strength/fitness/ability to propel them along. Surely the whole raison d'ȇtre of these EAPCs is to provide a touch of help so that the act of cycling is made a little easier?
Electric motors, as used in EAPCs, are pretty simple devices and within the legal parameters specified in most of Europe, are considerably limited in their output. Provided that the bikes which took part in the ride-off at Bristol were in compliance with the regulations, then the difference in motor output would have been marginal rather than substantial therefore a number of other factors would have been more likely to influence the result.
The Bristol 'race' can only be viewed as a bit of fun as no scientific testing took place nor was there any handicapping system in place as in, for example, horse-racing. The guy who came second knows a thing or two about EAPCs so either, he knows the winning machine was providing assistance beyond the legal maximum or he is simply a really bad loser. Frankly, I don't give a Friar! All I know is that I can cycle much easier on all of my EAPCs than I can on a relatively light pushbike with only my own efforts to propel me. If roadies race past me, I really don't mind; I just wish I had their energy.
Those EAPC riders who brag about speeding past 'roadies', usually uphill, are really pretty sad as they just don't seem to 'get' what electrically-assisted cycling is about.
Tom