More worryingly would be after an accident when the fine toothed comb might come out. (To prove some sort of liability)
A yes and no to this though Ken. The DfT's IVS division have ruled that an EAPC with throttle needs to be type approved for use in Great Britain, (somewhat oddly excluding Northern Ireland!), but I agree that enforcement is impractical. However, this ruling isn't likely to be accepted in many mainland EU countries, if any, limiting those who take their e-bikes to the continent.I wonder whether we are not getting ourselves in a lather over very little here. Having reread the EU Directive the following would seem to be the case.
1) It is true that pedelecs (E bikes without a throttle) are specifically listed as being outside the scope of the Directive but then so are "self balancing vehicles". Can I conclude from this that I can legally ride my Segway on public roads? My point here is that there is a disconnect between what the bureaucrats have written and what law enforcement in individual countries will permit.
2) The chain of compliance for conforming with the EWVTA legislation relates to vehicle registration. To register a new vehicle you need a Certificate of Conformity and that is why people go through the appalling type approval process- so that their customers can get a licence plate and legally drive their vehicle on European roads. As nobody is suggesting that E bikes need to be registered vehicles, there is no motivation to have them type approved. What is the customer going to do with the CoC? Frame it and put it on his bedroom wall? Type approval without the requirement for registration is illogical and practically unenforceable.
3) The EAPC compliant Model 15 bike sold by my Company can be ridden as a pedelec but has a throttle. Presumably if we supplied it to customers with the throttle disconnected it would be perfectly road legal? If any individual customer decided to reconnect it that would be a matter for them but of course if they did so and were stopped by plod for unenthusiastic pedaling they could always claim to have bought the bike in 2015 on Ebay. Would they then be compelled to prove they didn't?
If you go to any holiday resort on the Med you will find tourists dashing around on little electric bikes and scooters operated on the throttle. These bikes have 1000w motors, no pedals and make no pretence at complying with any regulation. As I said, I wonder whether we are not getting ourselves in a lather over very little here.
Ken Ferguson
www.eriderbikes.com
No veo nada en diarios...And we now find that in Spain the police are coming down hard on non-conforming pedelecs with hefty fines
If I'm right, type approval only applies to the sale of new bikes. Could that mean that a retailer is free to fit a throttle for the customer after the bike has been sold, ie is no longer new? Just thinking how to help the commenter you replied to.The DfT's IVS division have ruled that an EAPC with throttle needs to be type approved for use in Great Britain,
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Interesting q. Do you have a citation for the law so we can check the wording?Good work Jonathan.
Pass the parcel back to the SVA then!
I wonder if front and rear hub motor bicycles are considered EPACs as these motors do not provide any assistance to the pedals?
There was a temporary dispensation pending the change in the law, that in the form of police forces instructed not to prosecute 250 watt e-bikes. However that made no mention of throttles since the EAPC regulation stated 200 watts with no mention of control methods. The change in the law on 6th April 2015 made that dispensation no longer necessary.If I'm right, type approval only applies to the sale of new bikes. Could that mean that a retailer is free to fit a throttle for the customer after the bike has been sold, ie is no longer new? Just thinking how to help the commenter you replied to.
Although maybe I've got confused. Didn't the DfT give some sort of special dispensation for throttles, and L1e-A without sva or so?
Thanks for your helpful post.Since the EU type approval law only exempts conforming pedelecs from being motor vehicles, it follows that any kit/privately produced one must also conform or it will be a motor vehicle in law.
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Altbough Type Approval appears to be aimed at manufacturers, I'm fairly confident that there is no statement to that effect. I add to that the fact that the DfT have on a various occasions stated online that the equivalent for "Grey" Imports, Home Builds etc is Single Vehicle Approval, also that all EU member countries have these same arrangements.Thanks for your helpful post.
This bit I am not sure about though. Type approval EU law seems to be addressed at large manufacturers of new bikes only; 'competence', i.e. the job and power of making law, in the areas not covered by the type approval law, seem to be firmly in the hands of the UK govt. I.e. UK govt's hands are free to make what laws it wants, I believe.
Those latter UK laws of course might be challenged by an individual or a company on the grounds that (to confuse things here...) they DO affect free movement of goods and services across EU borders, contrary to the Charter and proportionality, however, in the first instance I think they are in the hands of the UK.
This is supported by the two bold sections in the letter I pasted. But I might be wrong about all this. Confusing!
what do you expect the response time to be from the moment someone stops pedalling to motor cutting out?Probably the easiest answer would be to design a controller with separate handlebar switch which can redirect the switched output of the crank sensor to either power up the handlebar display for normal pedelec operation or when switched make the full throttle active, both require the pedals to be turning but gives the rider the option to choose which method of power operation he or she prefers given the riding conditions.
This thing about pedalling and cutouts, isn't that an EU thing? I think that only applies therefore to type approval if so (am I wrong?) Going to post something else in a second which I think is illuminating, email from the European Commish.what do you expect the response time to be from the moment someone stops pedalling to motor cutting out?
Whilst it's normal to expect in the case of torque sensor input that to be near instantaneous because most torque sensored bikes do not have brake sensor, when applied to a bike with brake sensor and throttle input, that response is tied to the pedelec rotational sensor. What can you expect? there is no regulation about this lag time. As an example, the Woosh Gallego implements this scheme, the lag time is about 5 seconds.
Since the EAPC regulations are a UK measure, Westmister rulings apply for all nations in the UK...and what does our local Assemblys have to say on this, ie the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Ireland regional Assemblys? Have they any say at all or is it all taken from Westminster?
Or Strasbourg!!
Thanks for the information Jonathan.I still can't understand whether an SVA will be needed for a single runs or short runs of throttle pedelecs in the UK built after 2016 or if the DfT was going to give us all a dispensation. Sorry if I've not being paying attention, I read everything but maybe have forgotten.