I'm afraid you and Flud are guilty of gross exaggeration, inflating a very minor issue into one that's all out of proportion. So what if there are three or four threads about illegal builds, what are they compared to the circa 150,000 electric assist bikes out there and our near 65 millions population?
In the greater scheme of things we are probably one of the most legal areas in mobile society. In the motorcycle world illegal practices are very widespread, far more than in ours. And in the motoring world, breaching speed limits is more the rule than the exception. And as traffic police know only too well, they don't have to look very hard for tachograph fiddling on trucks.
The overwhelming majority of e-bikers are legally compliant with both power and speed limitation, making the e-biking scene positively angelic compared to the other areas mentioned.
So will you please stop the exaggeration and reflect the true favourable position.
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Flecc, with respect, I'm not suggesting we have a
major massive problem or the industry is in dire peril of imminent massive government regulation.
I'm just saying, regulation is a
distinct possibility, because we're not talking about something trivial here. This is a major public safety issue if you have illegal motorbikes (regardless of whether its 1 or 1,000) riding at 30mph+ on public footpaths and roads, totally registered, unlicensed etc etc.
Even putting the legal and regulation issues aside, and the scale of it. If even
one person gets seriously or even fatally injured (whether the rider or a third party) because some youngster wasn't very responsible, or gained entirely the wrong impression from his peers on this site, or some seller sold him illegal kit via this site, then that's a very sad day.
Common sense should suggest that heavy government regulation of this totally unregulated marketplace is a
possibility and certainly
more likely to happen if someone is going 30mph+ on a pavement or road on a bicycle that's really an electric motorbike but which has not been engineered properly, nor safety compliance tested through the vehicle type registration process and MOT, and it eventually results in a very bad accident.
It's a risk. Small, maybe. But it's a risk which could become very significant as complacency sets in (as it appears to have done already) if we act irresponsibly and don't apply some common sense and
some degree of self-regulation and legal guidance.