fooferdoggie
Well-Known Member
throttle lovers gonna hate.
lolthrottle lovers gonna hate.
I have two bikes with aftermarket Tongsheng TSDZ2 mid drives and two aftermarket hub motor bikes (one front, one rear), all of them have option of throttles. And one BH gravel bike with a Yamaha PW-SE mid drive that doesn't have a throttle option - unfortunately BH had the walk assist disabled for that bike. I would have liked and used the walk assist, or a throttle, last fall riding the "Old West Scenic Bikeway" in eastern Oregon on a very steep, long, section. Walking beside the bike loaded for touring would have been much better than having to push it up the hill.IDK, but I think Bafang does that. You can buy a throttle or not. No big deal.
Throttles certainly have their place. Someday I may welcome one but not yet.Cracked some ribs, among other minor injuries, on this endo over the bars. Motored home. (also bent the front fork a bit). Without that throttle I'd be done for.
Also the comments about how you don't need to use a throttle to start from a stop comes from recreational riders who don't understand the ramifications of using an ebike as a true automobile replacement. In particular what it takes to start a bike with a 560 lb total system weight. Its not just weight - which is significant - the big deal is balance at start. Over and over again from one red light to the next. The pic below was this specific 560 lb run from Costco. My speed home peaked (!) to around 8 mph so hot rodding was irrelevant to the need. I pedaled once I got going, as I always do.
View attachment 90089
Poor planning on my part for not realizing how heavy a 36-pack of soda actually was. The 560 was the most I've ever carried, weightwise, but I've often been in the 400-500 lb range.
Throttles are a tool. Not everyone knows how to use tools, or even understands them sometimes, and thats OK. We can't all be experts on everything (although this being the internet ... )
That's true on the trails where I ride but when I asked if it was OK to ride the trails as long as I unplugged it first they said that was fine.My throttle is an infrequently used tool but I'm very glad it's there when I need it. The only down side is, a throttle makes it a class 2 bike, which in some areas, makes it illegal to ride.
A throttle is damn handy when you need to cross a busy intersection or need to bump up your cadenceI am new to E bikes and EBR. Have been reading a lot of posts on the site and doing a lot of research on so many E bikes.
When it comes to throttle or no throttle and why some manufacturers decided not to put a throttle on is puzzling to me.
There was a time when I would never think of in a E bike. It's like cheating but I had both my knees replaced recently and
this puts me back in the game again. Personally I would prefer throttle in case my knees give out for whatever reason.
But the new Fuell is a class 3 28 mpg with no throttle and a Enviolo Aurora Limited class 2 20 mpg has a throttle why.
It seems to me you took yourself out of sales. If you did put a throttle on the owner who doesn't want to use it
wouldn't bother them. Somebody needs to enlighten me a little on the subject
Exactly this. I've found on a number of hills as I go farther out from my "normal" non electric riding area that you can tap the throttle -- at least if you have a hub motor -- whilst shifting so that you can better "dead pedal", putting a lot less stress on things when you suddenly need to do a downshift you didn't plan on. I just yesterday barreled up a very rocky 30 grade weaving through a group of a half dozen plus mountain bikers, several of whom gave up and got off to push, and the throttle let me safely switch gears mid climb after one of them braked and went sideways in front of me, forcing a sharp turn and braking I really hadn't planned on.A throttle is damn handy when you need to cross a busy intersection or need to bump up your cadence
going into a hill. Once I build momentum, I can sustain it with a lower gear & higher cadence that needs
little or no juice.
Also the EU and UK limit the motor power to ridiculous 250 watts. In my book you might as well not even put a motor on at that level.The Euro bike makers have no throttles because they are illegal in Europe. Their lobbyists helped implement the USA Class 1, and CLass 3 systems which are pedal assist only. Class 2 is of course both pedal and throttle. Current importers of chinese bikes have been re-defining class 3 as throttle to 20 mph, PAS to 28 mph, which is not really true to the definition, but what do I care. All my bikes have throttles,
I think most people would like to have a throttle and use it as desired.
Thats just their way of making a few more bucks.IDK, but I think Bafang does that. You can buy a throttle or not. No big deal.
But in actuality none of their bikes a limited to 250 watts and most are at least 500w or even more. The vagueness of the wording of that law has been discussed on here many times.....but I do agree that if a system was only capable of 250w it wouldn't be worth the weight and complexity to have aboard.Also the EU and UK limit the motor power to ridiculous 250 watts. In my book you might as well not even put a motor on at that level.