• They are very easy to 'open' most of the time just set the wheel size differently and it feels it's going a legal 15.6mph on 16inch wheel when really it's going much faster on a 28inch wheel.

    Would be interesting to see how the statistics are split between regular bikes and cargo bikes, having dhl add 1000s of ebikes to the fleet is a great way to fudge statistics.

    It's not all bad, a fair amount of the cyclists who switch to using them it's for medical reasons when the only other option would have been a motorbike or car. All the people I have known in the last few years(in the uk) using ebikes daily it's been for medical reasons to prolong the time they can enjoy riding.

    Yet to meet anyone who used it to take the edge off a long commute, I think ebike use is rather limited in that aspect as the cheaper ebikes aren't great quality and wouldn't withstand a long daily commute, when you jump up into the £2k+ ebikes you then can't realistically lock it anywhere. Also once you hit the outskirts of london and hills the motor on your 'opened' ebike is going to overheat and break. They might improve a little but at the moment buying an ebike that will be reliable enough to commute like that vs a cheap scooter, it's more practical and cheaper to just get a scooter.

  • They are very easy to 'open' most of the time just set the wheel size differently and it feels it's going a legal 15.6mph on 16inch wheel when really it's going much faster on a 28inch wheel.

    Yes, completely unlawful, of course.

    It's not all bad, a fair amount of the cyclists who switch to using them it's for medical reasons when the only other option would have been a motorbike or car. All the people I have known in the last few years(in the uk) using ebikes daily it's been for medical reasons to prolong the time they can enjoy riding.

    I've been following the e-bike story mainly through the good offices of A to B magazine for about twelve years, and there are often readers' letters to this effect. However, I do think that this eminently sensible use is not likely to be very prominent if and when the market takes off in the UK, if evidence from other countries is anything to go by.

    Yet to meet anyone who used it to take the edge off a long commute, I think ebike use is rather limited in that aspect as the cheaper ebikes aren't great quality and wouldn't withstand a long daily commute, when you jump up into the £2k+ ebikes you then can't realistically lock it anywhere.

    There has been a tremendous increase in cycle parking in new developments in Central London, which would naturally prove a suitable class of receptacle for fleets of e-bikes, too.

    Also once you hit the outskirts of london and hills the motor on your 'opened' ebike is going to overheat and break. They might improve a little but at the moment buying an ebike that will be reliable enough to commute like that vs a cheap scooter, it's more practical and cheaper to just get a scooter.

    They said the same thing ten years ago, and while technology seems to have plateaued a little, it is nonetheless being improved all the time. Many people actually say that they particularly like them on hills.

    #offtonorthsnow

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