Cyklefanatic
Well-Known Member
As soon as the warranty expires!You need a Bikespeed my friend.View attachment 52314
As soon as the warranty expires!You need a Bikespeed my friend.View attachment 52314
Not that it's going to help much legally, but many bikes have a user configurable upper speed limit they can set themselves.I have a class 3 bike, but sometimes wonder about the fact that I'm not officially supposed to ride on bike paths. So far, it's not been an issue and on the paths I ride very carefully. I'm wondering if there's anything like an "unchip": instead of undoing the limit for your bike, it might lower the limit (though I 'd like it to be easy to reverse).
I have a class 3 bike, but sometimes wonder about the fact that I'm not officially supposed to ride on bike paths. So far, it's not been an issue and on the paths I ride very carefully. I'm wondering if there's anything like an "unchip": instead of undoing the limit for your bike, it might lower the limit (though I 'd like it to be easy to reverse).
Not that it's going to help much legally, but many bikes have a user configurable upper speed limit they can set themselves.
I think the Class limits are stupid, and there's little to no enforcement. It's not something I would worry about.
This. No way to tell by looking at the bike what class, so cops and rangers have to ignore it .and pay attention to how you ride, which is probably what they should do anyway. 20 mph is 20 mph no matter if pedaling, throttling, or coasting downhill.The fact there are easy ways to change the bike's max speed, not to mention modify the bike's performance capabilities with so many other potential possibilities in many cases, is what makes the class limits so stupid - and is very likely one of the bigger reasons they aren't enforced much, if at all. My opinion, of course!
Our LBS applies a small sticker on the seat tube that identifies the Class of each ebike they sell. They put Class 1 stickers on our Class 3 bikes so we're good to go...This. No way to tell by looking at the bike what class, so cops and rangers have to ignore it .and pay attention to how you ride, which is probably what they should do anyway. 20 mph is 20 mph no matter if pedaling, throttling, or coasting downhill.
well my bike has Bosch performance speed right on the mid drive it would be hard to hide that. plus on the frame it says class 3 and 28mph.
Yes it appears to an outsider that the whole 3 class system is a political compromize with little logic involved other than what can be sold to officials. So be it, it could be a lot worse...I can't speak to what is happening in local jurisdictions around the country. After spending a year in meetings and public forums, talking to regulators on the phone and writing letters to representatives, it's my experience government is getting up to speed on what ebikes are and what is legal fast. That includes law enforcement. Whether a particular officer will want to strictly enforce regulations, could be another matter.
We set up a test ride with local authorities and they turned out in large numbers. We just wanted to gain access to local trails, they were there to learn. I was surprised just how much many of them learned on there own. It went very well and they had a blast riding our bikes. Ebikes can put a smile on most people. Everyone wants to see public spaces utilized.
The best defense is to ride a legal bike, next best is to ride rationally and safely. I wouldn't count on regulators and enforcers to be ignorant of ebikes. We are mostly rural and they knew more than I expected. The one thing that angered them the most was people ignoring local regulations. To a few, they thought the easiest thing to to was ban them all. We were fortunate that cooler heads prevailed and we won access.
The cutoffs might seem arbitrary, but the system is far from without logic. What ebike advocates want is to be treated like a normal bicycle. The various management agencies that run things like MUPs, trails, bike lanes and the like are generally not fans of powered vehicles and wary of allowing new groups. The class system basically lays out a set of limits that tell those agencies that the industry thinks things within these parameters are close enough to a normal bicycle that they can be treated the same. The more the class system gets adopted, the more comfortable other agencies are with it. Overall its a good thing. We can argue about whether the limits make sense; I think they are fine, personally, and looking at rules worldwide the US 3 class system is the most generous with speed and power that I'm aware of.Yes it appears to an outsider that the whole 3 class system is a political compromize with little logic involved other than what can be sold to officials. So be it, it could be a lot worse...
Ah, yes. That utopia of good behavior and rule following that is our road system. Definitely what we should be emulating. I was just marveling the other day at how everyone drives within the limit here in town.
Ah, yes. That utopia of good behavior and rule following that is our road system. Definitely what we should be emulating.
I was just marveling the other day at how everyone drives within the limit here in town.
I'm with everyone who thinks that the 3-class system is not workable. However, it was what got ebikes made legal as bicycles where I live in North Carolina. There was talk about making them mopeds. Which means registration and insurance. So if that's what it took for our legislators to decide that someone had actually thought this out, what makes an ebike a bike and not a moped, then I'm all for it. It's the pragmatic viewpoint I suppose. It made my Class 3 CrossCurrent S legal where I live.
When I'm on a bike trail, I ride courteousy. I don't want to cause any grief. Same would hold true if I had an analog bike.
There are other reasons besides speed that make motorbikes (the example given was a Ducati) inappropriate for bike paths and MUPS.