If you have a throttle and the bike will not go over 20mph, you have a Class II bike.
By locked down, I meant there was a restriction on the available settings. Much like the one that allowed you only 24/25mph. Not locked down would allow ANY number to be used there.
You don't need a class 3 to get more hill climbing ability. You need more power. Actually, the bike you have, if not locked down by the mfg. COULD be a class 3 bike.
If not into doing modifications, and you want to climb bigger hills more easily, you might look into a mid drive bike with a 750w motor. That should handle about anything shy of a steep mountain trail and may still qualify as a class 2.
Remember that class 3 means more speed, not more power. There are many powerfull class 1 ebikes (no throttle, 20 mph limit) that can climb big hills ... Bulls comes to mind ... Yamaha ... Class 1 Vado .In the future they are going to have to lock and seal bike computers to assure they stay at whatever class a bike is designated to be. My bike was bought as class 2, but it is now class 3 because it will go over 20 mph after my adjustment. I know I should change it back to avoid trouble. But, that extra speed comes in handy (when I'm alone) and no-one seems to be looking...yet. BUT at some point it's going back. All the 750 watt mid drives I've looked at will go much faster than 20. Adding gearing really opens the top end up. I think mid-drive class one bikes are generally 250 watts. It's a European thing. Those bikes, Yamaha, Trek, Specialized are much lighter and could easily be peddled over 20. Putting controls on ebikes will be difficult. I believe that in the end true class 2 bikes will have to be hub drives. The trick is going to be getting as much power as I can for mountain trails while not getting stuck with something I can't use in all the great parks and canal trails here. But there obviously is no clear answer to this right now.
Remember that class 3 means more speed, not more power. There are many powerfull class 1 ebikes (no throttle, 20 mph limit) that can climb big hills ... Bulls comes to mind ... Yamaha ... Class 1 Vado .
I agree that torque not watts is your friend on hills or headwinds. And I believe the Vado 5 has 80 NM and the Giant has more and don't forget it's got 8 or 10 gears to run that power thru. Go test drive a middrive and see what you think if you haven't already tried one .I have a very bad back. Throttle is a welcome relief at times. BUT, I do like everything Yamaha makes. Even though their battery and motor output are less. I'll bet those master engineers design some very capable bikes. I've thought about them a few times. I'm thinking I have about 50 NM of torque right now. Can't help but think a 100 NM output would give me some more low end.
Certainly not in Florida. HB 971 became effective 1 July 2020, all classes of ebikes are authorized to travel wherever bicycles are allowed to travel.The 3 class law only applies to on road not off road in every state that adopted it. There are only 2 rail trails on state land that allow class 1 ebikes in the state of Maryland. I ride them often. I'm not trying to argue your sentiments, as I don't disagree with the spirit of what you said. I just thought you'd want to know.
Different law. I referenced the model legislation designating the three classes of ebikes. States have passed a variety of other laws regulating where ebikes can ride. The three class law does not include off road venues.Certainly not in Florida. HB 971 became effective 1 July 2020, all classes of ebikes are authorized to travel wherever bicycles are allowed to travel.
Certainly not in Florida. HB 971 became effective 1 July 2020, all classes of ebikes are authorized to travel wherever bicycles are allowed to travel.
Actually J.R. ... I think class 3 is private property only in some states. Not even street legal. But didn't know Florida counted them all like regular bikes. Makes a lot of sense. I think they are the only state with an older average age than us, and flat. Ebiking should explode there unless it's just too hot..
Different law. I referenced the model legislation designating the three classes of ebikes. States have passed a variety of other laws regulating where ebikes can ride. The three class law does not include off road venues.
Actually J.R. ... I think class 3 is private property only in some states. Not even street legal. But didn't know Florida counted them all like regular bikes. Makes a lot of sense. I think they are the only state with an older average age than us, and flat. Ebiking should explode there unless it's just too hot.
Those coastal hills don't come to mind like the top of the state for me. My sister lives in Ocala, horse country flat. And everglades flat.Regarding "flat". Not all of it, not by any shape of the imagination. Maybe you've heard me referencing my struggles with a rolling hills coastal area? The kind with BIG hills? That's in Florida. On the Gulf Coast north of Tampa. Often referenced as the "Nature Coast" and north central Florida. I'm thinking there's another similar area over by Lakeland.
Re: older average age. I do agree with that. Walkers and bikers constantly mowed down on the sides of streets, people running into buildings. There, it's not just inattention, it's often the senior factor. "Oops, I didn't see him..... ".
I haven't liked the 3 class from the start. It pits us against each other and allows for targeted regulations of each class. I think I saw you post that you'd like to see the limit at 25mph. Funny thing is when the 3 class law was proposed in 2015, a lot of us were saying the same. I'd rather see the class as just "ebikes". A low power assisted bicycle that can go wherever bicycles can go.Actually J.R. ... I think class 3 is private property only in some states. Not even street legal. But didn't know Florida counted them all like regular bikes. Makes a lot of sense. I think they are the only state with an older average age than us, and flat. Ebiking should explode there unless it's just too hot.
/RantBegins/ Just look at how many hoops Stephan had to jump thru for his S Vado. Lights. Liscence plate. No riding on the bike lanes or whereever. I don't want that here.I haven't liked the 3 class from the start. It pits us against each other and allows for targeted regulations of each class. I think I saw you post that you'd like to see the limit at 25mph. Funny thing is when the 3 class law was proposed in 2015, a lot of us were saying the same. I'd rather see the class as just "ebikes". A low power assisted bicycle that can go wherever bicycles can go.
Class 3 bikes aren't legal in PA. Our ebike law went into effect October 2014 before the three classes were even thought of. Given how slow our state moves, I don't see that changing for a while. State land, off road is class 1 only. Things move slow here and even slower when nobody's pushing.