Yes. However, the essence of the article quoted by e-boy here is different.Ongoing discussion here: https://electricbikereview.com/forums/threads/atlantic-magazine-on-ebikes.50419/page-2
I don’t have any issue with the speed of others on the road. I think that the place where a conflict arises is on bike paths and lanes, especially going up hill. I can’t honestly say that I completely disagree with the author when it comes to using certain classes of ebikes on bike paths or lanes. On the open road, I think that all three classes are fine.It's assumptions like these that cause me to question the focus of the writer and loose any interest in reading further. He sounds like a frustrated clown suit rider-
"Most urban cyclists ride somewhere between eight and 12 mph; 15 mph is a pretty good clip if you’re riding for exercise, 18 mph is a fast Spandex person road bike pace on flat ground. E-bikes can, as a matter of course, do 18 mph with almost no effort on the part of the rider. Most can go even faster. That may not sound like a big difference, but it means in practice, e-bikes are going twice as fast as bicycles. The whole point of e-bikes is the effortless speed, so it is natural to get impatient when temporarily relegated to the speed of a regular bike."
On the bold, in my experience, this assumption is complete BS. Yes there is the occasional jack ass, just like on analog bikes, but the vast majority of e-bike riders are NOT riding any faster than they would on a regular bike. Not when I see them anyway. Because they can, does not mean that they are or they will.
There is a jealousy component when someone gets passed by an ebike and the pocket book won’t entertain one.
I was referring to pedestrians.I don’t think that jealousy accurate. I think that how the convention cyclist reacts often depends on the person that is passing.
I am not sure what you think the conventional cyclist is jealous of. The ebike rider has nothing that a conventional cyclist can’t have. If you are talking about speed, I have ridden centuries averaging over 18 mph, (many ride faster). If you are talking range, I have ridden more than 200 kilometers in a day and many riders have ridden much further. Money, I had a Specialized S-Works Roubaix with Dura Ace DI2, (the wheels alone were more than $3,000.00 and cost more than most e-bikes). Accomplishment, the conventional bike wins there as well.
E-bikes are a pleasure and I love riding mine, but if I pass someone that is riding without assistance, I sure don’t feel superior and I suspect that they don’t feel jealousy, or inferior.
I was referring to pedestrians.
The tyranny of the able bodied?Revolution = a forcible overthrow of a government or social order, in favor of a new system.
Curious, Now that I have my ebike, what am I supposed to be overthrowing?
I don't seem to have any problems while driving my Kia Soul on the same highway as a Corvette. That would be because there is this thing called a speed limit on the highway that we share. Seems to me then that the solution to the problem they talk about would be to have a speed limit on bike lanes of say 10 to 15 mph and enforce it.
Written by an idiot. I ride at 18 mph with my regular road bike and at 18 mph with my e-bike. The difference is that I can do this with the e-bike when I have a 15 mph headwind. I bought a Class III bike so as to not have the pedal assist cut out at 18 mph when pushing up a hill but my average speed is not greater than on my regular road bike. Even my Class III bike requires serious effort to cruise along at speeds greater than 20 mph and the motor only provides power when I am pushing down on the pedals. If I don't pedal there is zero assist.