Inflated tyres are for lazy people...

JuicyBike

Trade Member
Jan 26, 2009
1,671
527
Derbyshire
"Using air in tyres is simply cheating!"

Sometimes I get a desired reaction from the e-bike cynics using this statement and we can get past the "e-bikes are for lazy people" misconception.

Anybody got any other ideas?

On a cold wet day in June it might be a good time to plan some new sales pitches...
 

jazper53

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 20, 2012
890
18
Brighton
"Using air in tyres is simply cheating!"

Sometimes I get a desired reaction from the e-bike cynics using this statement and we can get past the "e-bikes are for lazy people" misconception.

Anybody got any other ideas?

On a cold wet day in June it might be a good time to plan some new sales pitches...
I will have a go, more of a slogan really. "buy one before they are banned"
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,136
30,556
Perhaps for our definition we approach e-bikes from the wrong direction. Instead of calling them bikes with electric assistance, perhaps we should call them low powered motorcycles with pedal assistance.

That would make them intended for energetic, physically fit motorcyclists. :)
 

amigafan2003

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jul 12, 2011
1,389
139
"Motor cycles for people that don't want to pay insurance, tax, take a test or wear a helmet"


On second thoughts..................................
 

JuicyBike

Trade Member
Jan 26, 2009
1,671
527
Derbyshire
Perhaps for our definition we approach e-bikes from the wrong direction. Instead of calling them bikes with electric assistance, perhaps we should call them low powered motorcycles with pedal assistance.

That would make them intended for energetic, physically fit motorcyclists. :)
Yes indeed!
Often, when a potential customer feels the weight of an e-bike, lifting it, at that point I remind them:
"It's heavy for a bike, but bl**dy light for a motorbike!"
 

Cyclic

Finding my (electric) wheels
May 3, 2012
10
0
Huddersfield
A couple of weeks ago I e-cycled to the top of a local hill Holme Moss. There is a car park at the top and I was approached by a chap interested in my bike but then accused me of cheating when he realised that it was electric. He had driven there in his car!

Anyway he went on to tell me that he had recently bought a bike but due to the state of his health/age he was limited to cycling on the flat in the valleys.
Could I convince him that an electric bike would solve this problem - no way.

Most people I talk to seem to think that electric equates to no peddling.
 

eddieo

Banned
Jul 7, 2008
5,070
6
Yes indeed!
Often, when a potential customer feels the weight of an e-bike, lifting it, at that point I remind them:
That there are better, lighter E bikes around?:p
 

neptune

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 30, 2012
1,743
353
Boston lincs
Inflated tyres are for lazy people? No I think under inflated tyres are for people who are too lazy to use a bike pump. Next time you go out, notice how many bikes are ridden with nearly flat tyres. And its usually full suspension mountain bikes. These people must like wasting energy , what with their flat knobbly tires, and unnecessarily heavy bikes. No wonder they cycle as little as possible.
 

Scimitar

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jul 31, 2010
1,772
40
Ireland
Pah. You're all decadent weaklings with air in your tyres. Real men stuff pigs' intestines with straw and form a perfectly good tyre.
 

GaRRy

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 18, 2012
1,019
3
Tamworth
Pah. You're all decadent weaklings with air in your tyres. Real men stuff pigs' intestines with straw and form a perfectly good tyre.
Tyres now that really is for whimps nowt wrong with a wooden wheel
 

neptune

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 30, 2012
1,743
353
Boston lincs
Being seious, has anyone noticed that less effort is required to pedal on a really good smooth road surface as opposed to a mediocre one. I know a couple of roads locally where I can actually pull a higher gear on these stretches, and it is not about gradient, as the same effect applies in both directions.
 

Scimitar

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jul 31, 2010
1,772
40
Ireland
Yes, it's all about frictional losses as tyre rubber digs into the rough surface and grips a bit, it also loses you energy as it leaves the rough bit. Multiply that by thousands of times a second... it adds up. A smooth surface being met with hard-inflated tyres doesn't dig in and takes less energy from you to keep bowling along. The other extreme is rough old knobblies on rough tracks - it's no surprise to be knacked after that, as you're expecting it, but the same knobblies on tarmac waste a lot of cycling effort, both for the wasted grip and the (usually) under-inflation, which brings in factors such as unnecessary sidewall flex and too much rubber in contact with the road.