George S.
Well-Known Member
If you buy from a company like Prodeco, the speed is limited to 20 mph.
The original CPSC standard is 20 mph, without much regard for how that speed is reached. All motor seems to be fine.
If you buy a kit off Ebay, and pick some performance components (battery and controller) you can go 40 mph, probably faster.
If you buy what is now the ‘standard’ BBS 02 with a 48 v and 750 watt setup, it is really at least 1200 watts, and that is around 35mph real world speed.
Some manufacturers are selling 28 mph bikes, claiming there is an exception to the CPSC 20 mph limit, if there is a PAS system in place. No one says how hard the rider has to work. On a basic system with magnet, is it possible to just play pedal and go 28 mph, or maybe pedal backwards? Wouldn’t that be a circular foot throttle? Is it fair to Prodeco or any other adherent to 20 mph to say you have an exception that lets you go to 28? Do they really prove this ‘exception’?
The California standard, if passed, is 28 mph with pedal assist, and this critter is not an ebike. No one says how much pedal assist to go 28. How much should it be? The ‘industry’ seems to accept that above 20 mph, it’s not a bike. Does that matter?
Most states are, and will be for a long time, at 20 mph, whatever California does. The California law is scheduled to start in 2017. A lot can happen by 2017.
So you have manufactured bikes that respect most states and the CPSC limit, at 20 mph. You have a somewhat dubious category of ‘pedelec’ and these manufactured bikes go 28 mph. You have a large number of kit bikes that push well beyond the California and speed pedelec standard.
How does anyone make this work, or even make it a little bit fair?
The original CPSC standard is 20 mph, without much regard for how that speed is reached. All motor seems to be fine.
If you buy a kit off Ebay, and pick some performance components (battery and controller) you can go 40 mph, probably faster.
If you buy what is now the ‘standard’ BBS 02 with a 48 v and 750 watt setup, it is really at least 1200 watts, and that is around 35mph real world speed.
Some manufacturers are selling 28 mph bikes, claiming there is an exception to the CPSC 20 mph limit, if there is a PAS system in place. No one says how hard the rider has to work. On a basic system with magnet, is it possible to just play pedal and go 28 mph, or maybe pedal backwards? Wouldn’t that be a circular foot throttle? Is it fair to Prodeco or any other adherent to 20 mph to say you have an exception that lets you go to 28? Do they really prove this ‘exception’?
The California standard, if passed, is 28 mph with pedal assist, and this critter is not an ebike. No one says how much pedal assist to go 28. How much should it be? The ‘industry’ seems to accept that above 20 mph, it’s not a bike. Does that matter?
Most states are, and will be for a long time, at 20 mph, whatever California does. The California law is scheduled to start in 2017. A lot can happen by 2017.
So you have manufactured bikes that respect most states and the CPSC limit, at 20 mph. You have a somewhat dubious category of ‘pedelec’ and these manufactured bikes go 28 mph. You have a large number of kit bikes that push well beyond the California and speed pedelec standard.
How does anyone make this work, or even make it a little bit fair?