Chargeride
Well-Known Member
15mph is coming your way, the unofficial world government doesnt like individuality.
Your conspiracy theories become weirder and weirder15mph is coming your way, the unofficial world government doesnt like individuality.
No, these are mopeds treated as petrol scooters (Vespa). Registered, ensured, carrying a number plate. What Poland actually plans doing is banning the illegal Chinese scrap metal so many people here are proud of(and likely speed pedelecs, which are a type of electric bicycle)
Trust me, you do not want to commute 20 miles or more on 15mph bicycle everyday or ride it on the roads with 25-35 mph speed limit. More traffic jams are coming.
Imagine if all those delivery riders stopped and either walked off in protest, or all drove vans. You can't just alter one variable in a complex evolved system by personal dictate. It is all connected. You may not like mosquitos, but putting DDT in Walden Pond will have other repercussions.
I meant 20 miles one way, 40 miles round trip. Some people leave further and use ebikes for commute. I am sure even you would stop commuting 40 miles or more everyday on 15 mph ebike pretty soon.I commuted for 15 years on a non electric bike, on a variety of roads and paths and rarely averaged much above 15mph and was completely fine. My commute was 22 miles round trip for much of that. I don't personally buy that ebikes only work if they are turned into motor vehicles; the point of an electric bike is to allow more people to ride at bike speeds with less effort, not turn bikes into motorcycles. IMO.
Sorry, but commute time matters. My current commute is 28 miles roundtrip and it is about 45-50 minutes one way with average speed 18-20 mph (class 3 pedal-assist ebike)I commuted for 15 years on a non electric bike, on a variety of roads and paths and rarely averaged much above 15mph and was completely fine. My commute was 22 miles round trip for much of that.
This thing doesn't work this way. Pay is per delivery, so more deliveries = more pay. To do more deliveries you need to deliver faster. That's it. There is nothing about dangerous in this thing - pure market economy thing. You will ride following the limits - somebody who doesn't will took over your orders. This is not the delivery rides who want to ignore the rules, this is the system which motivates and monetize this.But that doesn't mean it isn't dangerous.
Exactly. You never saw road mamils going 40km/h to get those KOMs on $10k+ carbon bikes? Most of them never slowdown since it impact their Strava numbers, even it is safer to slow down.The fact that electric bicycles can move faster than you would like them to move does not turn them to motorcycles.
I meant 20 miles one way, 40 miles round trip. Some people leave further and use ebikes for commute. I am sure even you would stop commuting 40 miles or more everyday on 15 mph ebike pretty soon.
The fact that electric bicycles can move faster than you would like them to move does not turn them to motorcycles.
Exactly. You never saw road mamils going 40km/h to get those KOMs on $10k+ carbon bikes? Most of them never slowdown since it impact their Strava numbers, even it is safer to slow down.
This thing doesn't work this way. Pay is per delivery, so more deliveries = more pay. To do more deliveries you need to deliver faster. That's it. There is nothing about dangerous in this thing - pure market economy thing. You will ride following the limits - somebody who doesn't will took over your orders. This is not the delivery rides who want to ignore the rules, this is the system which motivates and monetize this.
There are people who say, "Bikes don't follow the rules." It is because they do not ride. Ever see a big rig make a right 90 degree turn, and cross the double yellow line? It is not that the big rig driver is being willful in not following the rules, it is the physics and nature of a big rig. And we cannot just do without them. Bikes differ from cars as much as cars to big rigs. If you stop while on a bike you fall over. We need to keep moving. With a bike conservation of hard earned momentum is important. We need more people on bikes in urban areas not fewer.More traffic jams are coming.
I ride a speed pedelec. I guess I'm not bringing my bike to Poland.Google AI
Poland is planning to ban electric scooters (and likely speed pedelecs, which are a type of electric bicycle) from roads with speed limits exceeding 30 km/h (approximately 20 mph). The plan also includes specific regulations for their use on footpaths and within residential areas.
Yours probably is not made to the EU L1e-B spec, so don't bring it hereI ride a speed pedelec. I guess I'm not bringing my bike to Poland.
My bike came with a headlight, taillight (brake light), reflectors, a number plate mount, and a horn.EU L1e-B is pretty much Class 3 is US, minus few things (I assume number plate holder, bell, light and reflectors are mandatory for L1e-B). Otherwise these are samr bikes with samr motors.
Did it come with the EU Type Rating paper...?My bike came with a headlight, taillight (brake light), reflectors, a number plate mount, and a horn.
Stefan, pppppbbbbblllllpppp.![]()
VIN and the paper. You cannot register it without.EU L1e-B is pretty much Class 3 is US, minus few things (I assume number plate holder, bell/horn, light and reflectors are mandatory for L1e-B). Otherwise these are samr bikes with samr motors.
Chris (you are Chris, innit), I'm sure yours is an L1e-B. If this is a Bosch Speed motor then I can bet it is. There is certainly the VIN somewhere on the frame as well as a regular serial number. You might even get the certificate together with the paperwork. Does it has the STOP indicator light activated by the brake lever?My bike came with a headlight, taillight (brake light), reflectors, a number plate mount, and a horn.