You nailed it.If you are not a bike rider and just started on an electric bike
Seasoned ebike ( or motorcycle) owners assume they are invisible, and that everyone else is a threat. That's how they became "seasoned" riders rather than more statistics.You nailed it.
This is the part many just don't understand. Seasoned ebike owners assume everyone plays safe, when the truth is that there are a lot of affluent punks that just mail order an e-whatever for fun because it's easy to impulse buy and checkout with their phones, and then the fun stops when they break their own bones, or bones of other folks they hit.
I don't even go through an intersection with a car stopped on the cross street until I make eye contact with that person. I just keep slowing until they see me. Speaking of invisible people, I also assume there is an invisible, evil little person in every car parked along the road, just waiting to open their car door and take me out just as I pass by.Seasoned ebike ( or motorcycle) owners assume they are invisible, and that everyone else is a threat. That's how they became "seasoned" riders rather than more statistics.
Can you ever make a useful comment, or one that does not insult your own customers, members of this forum or humanity in general?You nailed it.
This is the part many just don't understand. Seasoned ebike owners assume everyone plays safe, when the truth is that there are a lot of affluent punks that just mail order an e-whatever for fun because it's easy to impulse buy and checkout with their phones, and then the fun stops when they break their own bones, or bones of other folks they hit.
Sorry for your injuries. that looks really bad, a lot worse than my crank, though not by much.or us hitting a post on our tandem. me a massive hematoma on my pubis bone wife with a cracked kneecap killed the whole drivetrainView attachment 91455View attachment 91456
obviously someone that didn't read the OP... in this case the OP needed to speed up and be in a lower gear....and folks want Class3 ebikes totally legal for use everywhere
Seriously, what's with all the falls and accidents? Just slow down
His name is Murphy. And he just wants a little respect.I don't even go through an intersection with a car stopped on the cross street until I make eye contact with that person. I just keep slowing until they see me. Speaking of invisible people, I also assume there is an invisible, evil little person in every car parked along the road, just waiting to open their car door and take me out just as I pass by.
True. Nothing to do with speed. I took the bike to a park with rolling hills today to practice. I think I may have hit the wrong button and decreased the assist instead of increasing it.A demeaning, irrelevant and useless comment. The OP fell because the bike's speed reduced to zero due to poor gear selection on a steep grade. It had nothing to do with speed.
I rode around a park today. I'm getting the hang of it. I was a serious road rider about 11 years ago. I'm 72 now with a bad back but I want to keep riding. I think I may have pressed the wrong button before I fell. Less assist instead of more.If you have an ordinary pedal bike I would suggest riding it as a warm up before jumping on the POWER machine. If you are not a bike rider and just started on an electric bike you should rent or borrow a pedal bike and get familiar with cadence, geometry, braking, turning etc before you have another tumble. Take it easy and have fun.
It is the ratio of weight. Your legs moving provide significant amount of the total weight. On a motorcycle, not the case. And by that non logic, a bicycle wheel weighs the same as a motorcycle wheel. Also higher cadence allows for adjusting the balance many times per minute.By this logic, people on motorcycles must fall over all the time. The gyro effect on a bike comes from spinning of the wheels, not the chainring. Even if there was a measurable stabilizing effect from the spinning of the chainring, it would be negated and overpowered by the force of pushing down on the pedals on every stroke. OP definitely needs basic lessons on bike handling and operation, but spinning at a higher cadence is not the solution.
What's that phrase about 'You never forget how ... it's like riding a bike...'I rode around a park today. I'm getting the hang of it. I was a serious road rider about 11 years ago. I'm 72 now with a bad back but I want to keep riding. I think I may have pressed the wrong button before I fell. Less assist instead of more.
That's why auto assist is so helpful, as you're getting used to your new bikeTrue. Nothing to do with speed. I took the bike to a park with rolling hills today to practice. I think I may have hit the wrong button and decreased the assist instead of increasing it.