J.R.
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
- City
- Piedmont Highlands
A new study seeks to answer that question. When I didn't own an ebike I may have said no, after riding and owning one I say; probably. I've read a fair amount on this topic and now know that ebikes with one horsepower or less function much like a traditional bike, but I'm still in the probably or maybe camp.
I have little doubt that one eMTB set against one traditional MTB will have identical impact on the land, more or less. But if you take that same trail that sees a couple hundred uses a year, increase to a couple thousand uses a year because more people are physically able to ride it due to electrical assist, is there any doubt there will be a bigger impact on the land?
I think this study is a step in the right direction. A lot of questions need answers, it's good to see people are attempting to answer those questions instead of arguing based solely on conjecture.
Where Should Electric Mountain Bikes Roam? Actionhub, 4/21/15
I have little doubt that one eMTB set against one traditional MTB will have identical impact on the land, more or less. But if you take that same trail that sees a couple hundred uses a year, increase to a couple thousand uses a year because more people are physically able to ride it due to electrical assist, is there any doubt there will be a bigger impact on the land?
I think this study is a step in the right direction. A lot of questions need answers, it's good to see people are attempting to answer those questions instead of arguing based solely on conjecture.
Where Should Electric Mountain Bikes Roam? Actionhub, 4/21/15