At 1100 watts, 1-1/2 horsepower this is a scooter/moped requiring DOT approved lights, brake lights, turn signals and rearview mirrors, like the Genge has. None of that stuff is cheap, it all requires testing and approval. Look at the tail light on any vehicle and you'll see the DOT stamp. I assume the scrambler is being made for off road only? Ebikes get away cheap because the federal government classified them bicycles, motor vehicles like scooters and mopeds are in a whole different class, requiring safety equipment and testing bicycles never see. I really don't understand where the scrambler fits with ebikes. It could be a cool thing for teenagers off road, private property, but the advertisements are showing on road use. I'd sure hate to see ebikes double in price because manufactures are illegally crossing the line into motor vehicles. That's where many in the government wanted ebikes to begin with. And many trail and path users would still like to call our ebikes motorcycles to get them off their trails. Prices of ebikes would easily double it manufactures had to pass DOT regs. There's still as many people against us as for us at this point in the US.
Agree that continued production of non-street legal bikes is unwise.
That said, is there any empirical justification for the 750W limit? I totally understand and agree with speed limits (though I think 30 mph might be better for all involved than 28 mph). But I can see the 750 W as limiting, especially as the industry progresses. 750W may not be enough to sustain top speed with hills, wind, or cargo.
I know the regulations were crafted by industry, and I imagine they didn't ask for more because they had no real plans of going beyond 750W (i.e. look at how all their stuff now is 250-500W).
Despite their intentions, I think these laws are mostly dumb in the real world, because they are crafted as if almost everyone isn't already driving cars unsafely with all the death and damage that causes. I.e. where I have to bike on streets without a bike lane, the speed limit is 35 mph and cars do 40 mph.
Chuck, agreed. A funny unintended consequence though - requiring insurance could make the problem worse, if it just drove people back into a) driving that causes more crashes but go unnoticed because it's mixed in with all the other car crashes or b) those ebikers instead drive cars as uninsured motorists, which is very common among poor households.
It's also possible that as ebiking becomes more common, especially among lower income people, there will be more of a lobby against regulation that invariably brings more oversight and contact by police and such.
We also have a rapidly growing bikeshare lobby valued in the billions, which is poised to supercharge ebiking (like in Sacramento, $1 ebike rides for 15 min).
With the RCS I have seen over 1255 when going up hill and petaling hard, so yes I don't get the 750 walts.The motor wattage rating is nonsense as it stands as well. It's not as bad as the nonsense wattage claims by cheap audio products, but there is no absolute standard that all manufacturers adhere to. Stromer used to tout their 500W motor. Now the same motor is listed as 800W in some promotional literature. a 500W internally geared hub motor will behave differently from a 500W direct drive hub motor, and differently from a 500W mid drive. Wattage isn't the only variable.
With the RCS I have seen over 1255 when going up hill and petaling hard, so yes I don't get the 750 walts.
The motor wattage rating is nonsense as it stands as well. It's not as bad as the nonsense wattage claims by cheap audio products, but there is no absolute standard that all manufacturers adhere to. Stromer used to tout their 500W motor. Now the same motor is listed as 800W in some promotional literature. a 500W internally geared hub motor will behave differently from a 500W direct drive hub motor, and differently from a 500W mid drive. Wattage isn't the only variable.
It might be. I have the 52V, so start up does show over 60 volts on full change
JRA, class 3 has both throttle and assist allowed.
Better check again. This is a good article on how the laws are structured and some good points about the bad points of it: https://www.electricbike.com/california-ebike-laws/
As long as there are statutes like the Class laws in place "if" there is an incident it will be referred to. And they are not going away but getting more restrictive including the new Insurance ones in the pipeline. That is why it just makes sense to ride responsibly as the above article suggests to begin with. But all this has been discussed in other posts. Back to the Scrambler.....
Class 3 can have a throttle, but only up to 20mph. After that you can have pedal assist up to 28mph. Well, I don't know about California law. That's NC law, but I think our law was crafted on the same model.edit apparently you are right, wow. I thought class 3 could have a throttle, evidently not.