Ebike helmet

Still have not owned my Ebike for two weeks, yet, and have logged 42 miles. I do not yet own a helmet so I looked at a lot of bike helmets. Too many to choose from and I am wondering if price has very much to do with rating the helmet as "better" than something cheaper. My top speed is about 25 MPH down one big hill but the rest of the time I maintain a pace of about 10 MPH since I don't use the electric motor most of the time. Worth investing in a helmet or not?
 
Its really up to what you want. No helmet, that's cool. Accidents happen so quick you just never know if you will ever need one til the time comes. For choosing a helmet I went with style and comfort as I really don't think the 'safety' to be much different from one to the next since most bicycle accidents are low speed. This is the company I went with, I liked their style. https://explorethousand.com/
 
It seems rather obvious to me without an ounce of specific knowledge...
That bike helmets are a shell and polystyrene and they dont at first glance seem to offer cushioning to prevent brain injury from impact and rattling inside the skull.
They would certainly protect against skull fracture.
If you fall off and smack your head on the floor hard enough to knock you out I just dont see any cushioning from all that I have seen to reduce this
They are just so hard, I actually feel construction site helmets offer more.
My mate has knocked himself out twice and without any deformity of the helmet shell or internal polystyrene to show it had absorbed the impact forces.
Obviously they work, I just feel theres a a lot of room for advancement to make them absorb the forces better.

So what Im saying is we should be wearing two foot across foam balls on our heads
 
I recently bought a full-face motorcycle helmet, and it is one serious head case. You put it on and you are imprisoned in the thing. I guess you need that in high speed head falls.
I would not like that in a bike helmet, but then again I come from a time before bicycle helmets.

I remember talking to a woman in a bar just after I came off a bike, and had separated a collarbone, breaking a wrist, and cracking a few ribs. She said I should of just landed on my head, because that's what helmets are for.
I wasn't persuaded by her advice, and have avoided any head plants so far. At my age, landing on my head, helmet or not, would be a very, very bad thing.
 
Accidents happen so quick you just never know if you will ever need one til the time comes.
Watch this. The man had ridden for 700 km (435 mi) mostly on gravel and singletrack to finish his adventure abruptly on wet asphalt last Friday.

The statements from the survivors (including myself) are "If no helmet, we wouldn't be talking right now".
 
this is also an interesting development

 
this is also an interesting development

How does this differ from MIPS, which has been available for a while? Looks like just a different way to accomplish the same thing.
 
Mips still keeps rotation of the head, while this system releases the skin of the hlemet so that the forces flow away in that manner and no rotation of the helmet/head is observed
 
Back