I'm asking this as I was in Amsterdam recently and saw an upturned ebike on the pavement receiving attention from what I assume could be the cycling equivalent of the AA/RAC.
The bike was one with the big sand tyres. It was placed on a large mat with the owner watching on while a uniformed mechanic was attending to either a mechanical/electrical problem or preparing to remove the back wheel. He had a small van which was racked and kitted out with tools.
As ebikes become more common, this could become an everyday sight (sooner in Holland than the UK given the higher use of cycling there I expect!).
Ebikes are a lot heavier to turn upside down even with battery removed, you have to rotate the LCD and other controls to rest the handlebars flat, unless you happen to have handlebar stands with you, and getting a rear wheel in or out of the dropouts can be a real struggle.
On a pavement this might just be doable, but fixing a puncture on a country road - highly unlikely.
I accept people who've converted bikes will say they don't have too many difficulty as the bike was lighter to start with, but those with a motor in the rear wheel probably still find spreading the frame challenging.
The bike was one with the big sand tyres. It was placed on a large mat with the owner watching on while a uniformed mechanic was attending to either a mechanical/electrical problem or preparing to remove the back wheel. He had a small van which was racked and kitted out with tools.
As ebikes become more common, this could become an everyday sight (sooner in Holland than the UK given the higher use of cycling there I expect!).
Ebikes are a lot heavier to turn upside down even with battery removed, you have to rotate the LCD and other controls to rest the handlebars flat, unless you happen to have handlebar stands with you, and getting a rear wheel in or out of the dropouts can be a real struggle.
On a pavement this might just be doable, but fixing a puncture on a country road - highly unlikely.
I accept people who've converted bikes will say they don't have too many difficulty as the bike was lighter to start with, but those with a motor in the rear wheel probably still find spreading the frame challenging.