Not up on MTB trails, so I'm not going to pretend to be an expert on that scene. I WILL question why the other 90+% of us should be affected by issues that are likely unique to MTB's and some of the trails that were designed for them to run on? For example, regarding how rules that apply to them might be justified in a multi use path scenario....
Keeping in mind the age of the average e-bike rider, please explain how putting a throttle on a bike (effectively changing it's "class" in the current structure) makes any sense at all?
I'm a big fan of Florida's laws, allowing ANY e-bike anywhere a bike can go. Not that I think it's perfect, but it makes MUCH more sense than what we have now with this "class" system.
I'm unfamiliar with Florida, but somewhat skeptical that they blanket allow ebike access
everywhere bikes can go in the whole state. Most states that have enshrined definitions in the state code (like my home state of VA) basically say that for the purpose of the vehicular code, ebikes are bikes, but does have exceptions (local jurisdictions can still ban them in locations they control if they choose) and in any case doesn't apply to locations not directly governed by the state code, like parks and such. Like, VA says my class 1 eMTB is a bike, but that doesn't mean I can ride it on trails in the GW National Forest near me because thats a different governing body (the National Forest Service, which is under the Department of Agriculture, which still basically bans all ebikes on natural surface trails). My local MUP is managed by a multi-county parks department (NoVA Parks) who decide what sort of access they will allow. Etc.
My understanding is the throttle/class 2 cutoff is because the federal definition for electric bike says that it can't travel past 20mph under motor power alone. So the throttle class (2) is capped at 20mph, but class 3 allows the higher speed because its pedal assist only and you have to be supplying some of the power yourself. Class 1 creates an ebike with the 20mph cap but no throttle, which is important if you want trail access on them. For a variety of reasons, throttles are a very difficult sell on natural surface trails, at least for the moment. I think the future is class 2/3 for road/commuting duties, and class 1 is eMTBs. Not there yet because some states don't have/allow class 3s (my home state of PA, for instance, only allows 20mph bikes at the moment, though it seems likely they will adopt the 3 class system soonish).
Not necessary. On singletrack the trail itself generally regulates the speed and its well below 20 mph. The limits posed by the environment and practices are well-described by
@jabberwocky above. Speeds in excess of 10-20 mph generally happen because downhill, and that is every bike thanks to gravity. As in not a problem unless some bozo is coming up a downhill trail. I literally just saw this happen riding with a friend this week where we were zooming down a hill and three ebikers were coming up at the same time. I don't think they were going faster than 10 mph if that, but being there at all was the problem.
The article is just about some people who think a new class
might be in order because
maybe something
might happen. Seems like typical FUD from the analog MTB community. A holding action after the abandonment of attempts to deny access entirely failed.
Dunno man, around me most of the MTB world is cautiously optimistic about ebikes. There are some die-hards that don't think they should exist, but the majority opinion seems to be to allow access, even among people with no interest in owning one. The issue is mainly that many governing agencies and land managers
really don't like/are scared of the idea of motorized vehicles on singletrack. I think we will get there, but its definitely happening at a slower pace than the rest of the cycling world.
That said, if you asked me 10 years ago where the speed cutoff should be I probably would have picked something closer to 15mph than 20. 20 is pretty fast on singletrack. Even after riding my class 1 for a few years I sometimes think "damn this thing is fast" on trails.