Chargeride
Well-Known Member
ive got 4 grands worth on my bikes, as long as they are stolen by breaking a lock or robbery.
Extra 80 a year on house insurance
Extra 80 a year on house insurance
Really hard to understand how that could even happen. Must've been a lot of speed involved.I'm not as concerned about theft. My bikes can be replaced. I'm concerned about liability for situations like this. A pedestrian was impaled by the handlebars of an e-bike and was critically injured. This PIL is chasing these cases.
yikes, i just read that article, thanks for sharing. that is a bit hard to understand how it happened but i suppose it could. wow. every new year i ride on bike paths, i continue to slow down more and more around people/kids/pets. when airpods came into play, it was basically game over for people even hearing bike bells or on your left. i am at the point i will go uncomfortably slow around people and even get off the path into the grass for safety. that's the liability part that makes me the most nervous for sure.I'm not as concerned about theft. My bikes can be replaced. I'm concerned about liability for situations like this. A pedestrian was impaled by the handlebars of an e-bike and was critically injured. This PIL is chasing these cases.
I like how you can change up positions with your palms and thumbs to prevent fatigue on long rides.Really hard to understand how that could even happen. Must've been a lot of speed involved.
Or maybe it was one of those new ebikes that go sideways. Or an unusually soft pedestrian, like the Pillsbury dough boy.
;^}
But this makes the most sense to me:
View attachment 200341
And that didn't stop them from putting "e-bike" in the headline.The 17-year-old was riding an unregistered
off-road electric motorbike. (NOT an e-bike as such.)
That was the attitude here in Coastal Northern California about seven years ago. Cargo moms are leading the way.consider e-bike riders to be "cheating"
and a general public of non-bike riders that think e-bikes are somehow
inherently "dangerous".
Ditto all over the US on the inherently dangerous perception, and the media — the skilled professional fear mongers that they are — never miss an opportunity to put ebikes in a bad light.Downunder, there's still this persistent undercurrent of (ignorant)
unpowered bicycle riders that consider e-bike riders to be "cheating"
and a general public of non-bike riders that think e-bikes are somehow
inherently "dangerous".
One single e-bike accident can make headlines across the country, but
multiple non-powered bikes frequently cause accidents with pedestrians,
but without a sole headline.
Victoria Walks, a state health promotion charity, has estimated around
a hundred pedestrians are injured by bikes every year, but unfortunately no
data says whether they're e-bikes or not.
I wouldn't be so quick to judge.Personally I am amused when someone goes on a 35-mile ride, comes home and then drives five blocks for a six-pack.
You do have a rack on it so you could have a small pannier.I wouldn't be so quick to judge.
View attachment 200610
My 38 lb gravel/fitness bike isn't set up to carry beer — or much of anything else for that matter. It's all about agility and responsiveness, and I intend to keep it that way.
I have a commuter for groceries.
Funny, I do ride (E-)bikes with and without racks, for pickup people at the train station (10 minute ride) I usually take an e-bike with a big backpack with the Brompton in it to the station so that the other can ride the e-bike home and I take the brompton.There is a group here, the Wheelmen, that has been around since the mid-1890's. Pre-pandemic they were snobbish towards assisted bikes. The bikes got better, old time members could keep in the game with their friends, and assisted bicycles became accepted. What takes a half-hour on a bus or in a car, takes ten-minutes in town by assisted bicycle. That is an interesting divide, those without a rack and panniers, and those with a rack and panniers. Because with a rack and panniers a car becomes a redundant burden.