I'll let you lot dissect this, as I'm still reeling from amazement
Now who's worried about a throttle on an ordinary ebike
I'll let you lot dissect this, as I'm still reeling from amazement
Maybe I'm missing something here.... like his number platesIf the police were happy I do not see he is getting away with anything.
He obviously keeps a good look out, spots walkers, kids on bikes etc. Seemed to be riding safely. No one harmed and no harm done and police satisfied.
He obviously had some form of third party insurance.
Maybe I'm missing something here.... like his number plates
I'd love to hear that conversation with Direct Line.Did not think e-bikes needed number plates?
Only the restriction makes them slow. The S class bikes all used to be based on standard 250 watt pedelcs using exactly the same motor and controller, just without the restriction. Those with limited gear ranges assistd to about 22 mph, those with more extensive gear ranges like 10 speed or the Rohloff hub were good for 26 mph. Both those speeds are well beyond what the average cyclist normally continuously achieves on the flat.These 15mph PAS bikes are a waste of space, slower than most people who are even at basic fitness levels can pedal, and barely able to pull you up a reasonable hill before the 250w limit runs out
Point is no insurance, household or pedelec, will be valid if the bike is illegal. Which this bike is by a country mile.But it is not a motorcycle, just an e-bike as they all should be.... OK the Stealth maybe a bit fast, but looks certainly not more SciFi than many D/H MTB's
These 15mph PAS bikes are a waste of space, slower than most people who are even at basic fitness levels can pedal, and barely able to pull you up a reasonable hill before the 250w limit runs out of steam.
You'd not need to buy third party insurance, (though I am sure you can), my household policy used to cover me for third party cycle risks.
I'd not advocate every 14 year old riding Stealth bikes, but that won't happen due to cost.
Current rules, just cripple what would otherwise be a great alternate means of transport. To have e-bikes capable of at least what many people can pedal up to, would get people out of cars.
Over the past few years I have been given,certainly over 20, 15mph PAS bikes, bought by owners who after paying £1000 or more find they are lumbered with something slower and heavier than their normal bikes. They buy them, use for a bit, are disappointed and get shoved to the back of the garage for batteries to go flat and dead... bad lithium cells etc,
I constantly hear complaints about weight and speed.
Make them a little more capable and their popularity would soar.
True, but not understanding what a pedelec is for is their problem. Your last line say it all, they want a law to enable them to dodge the law! That's never going to happen!I am just pointing out what I have seen over the past few years with countless bikes and people coming to see me about them to either fix or sell them ..or ask for a bit more power ..to 'de restrict ' them. People paying £880-£1500 or more want and expected something that gives the more performance than they can generally pedal a normal bike, but WITHOUT the hassle, size, cost and weigh of getting a moped.
But that is not a typical cycling speed Neil, it's only arisen since the British largely abandoned cycling decades ago, leaving it to the lycras. As a result we have those Britons who are still dedicated cyclists on road bikes and similar who approach cycling in a rather sporting manner, riding at around 20mph. Politicians and law makers see these as capable cyclists who have no need of assistance.Yes, limit the speed to 20-25mph.