They should copy the Yanks and set the limit at 750 Watts.
My 250 Watt Cyclamatic Power Plus (I think the plus means plus we just lied about the power) wont pull me up any of the hills around here even with me pedalling as hard as I can!
Mind you my Kilowatt Dillenger wont pull me up the steepest ones here either.
As for the 250 Watt scoooter,it wont even pull me on the level iof the winds blowing the wrong way.
Kinninvie......if we thought that our e-bike law is in a mess,look at the current situation in New York state....it is legal to sell an e-bike up to 750 watts of power but not legal to use one!!!!
The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) – the federal office that governs safety for bicycles and other consumer goods – offers the following definition of a “low-speed electric bicycle:”
- 2-3 wheeled vehicle
- Fully operable pedals (some gray area on how necessary the pedals need to be for the operation of the bicycle)
- Motor must be less than 750 watts (1 horsepower)
- Maximum assisted speed may be less than 20 miles per hour
These CPSC guidelines – the same body that governs bicycle safety – are currently the most popular legal reference. However, these guidelines only regulate the sale of e-bikes, not their use. In states whose vehicle laws are out of sync with with CPSC guidelines, it’s legal to buy an e-bike but not to ride one on the streets or paths.
For example, e-bikes are currently in “legal limbo” in New York State and City. Statewide motor vehicle law is fuzzy on the issue, but the laws seem to indicate that as long as a bike cannot be powered 100% by the motor (i.e., as long as it is a “pedelec” or pedal-assist system), it is legal to ride without motor vehicle registration. All other systems, like those that operate off of throttles regardless of total motor power or maximum speed, would need to be registered and insured like motorcycles.
This is not just a burden on bicycle owners, it’s also impossible. Bicycles do not have Vehicle Identification Numbers (VINs), so they're not technically eligible for registration or the type of insurance that the law would require. New York Bicycling Coalition has been attempting to get the definition of an electric bike clarified at the state level.
New York City has effectively banned the use of e-bikes, passing extremely strict regulations and instituting crackdowns to respond to residents’ concerns about the unsafe behavior of delivery cyclists riding electric bicycles.
Because the federal CPSC standard only governs sales and not use, it is, ironically, legal to buy an e-bike in New York State but not to ride one.
That lot makes our current situation look simple!!!
KudosDave