Bike_On
Well-Known Member
Electric bike classification, pedelecs, throttles, bike paths, bike lanes, safety, OEMs, Federal laws, state laws...
All these, and more, come into play when determining this Line-in-the-sand.
When, where, how do we determine the cross over?
My criteria:
1. It has to have a weight limit to limit motor size and battery. 80 lbs?
2. It has to have usable pedals. I'm not sure how to DQ the electric scooters with fake pedals, but it needs to happen, and pedals with working cranks must exist.
3. Power and speed: you define...
added:
4. When human effort stops adding meaningful propulsion.
This depend on the gears and hills, but a typical 48T/11T high gear is ok for the 28-30mph range and still work the legs. The power for that speed can be 500W for smooth road, skinny tires and more aggressive position. It can be 1 hp, 750W or more for less ideal. Add in hills, cargo, off road, and more power is needed to maintain speed.
5. Defining something less than 750W, per the federal law is a step BACKWARDS, imo.
6. In most states, a motorized anything, with 2 wheels, going 20-30mph is likely a Moped, which usually requires a driver's license, etc. Speed pedelecs meet that definition.
So why would anything under 30mph and 750W, with a throttle, be classified at motorcycle status, but a speed pedelec is a bicycle? That is what the CA legislation does.
I think the States will see through this and hopefully correct it.
All these, and more, come into play when determining this Line-in-the-sand.
When, where, how do we determine the cross over?
My criteria:
1. It has to have a weight limit to limit motor size and battery. 80 lbs?
2. It has to have usable pedals. I'm not sure how to DQ the electric scooters with fake pedals, but it needs to happen, and pedals with working cranks must exist.
3. Power and speed: you define...
added:
4. When human effort stops adding meaningful propulsion.
This depend on the gears and hills, but a typical 48T/11T high gear is ok for the 28-30mph range and still work the legs. The power for that speed can be 500W for smooth road, skinny tires and more aggressive position. It can be 1 hp, 750W or more for less ideal. Add in hills, cargo, off road, and more power is needed to maintain speed.
5. Defining something less than 750W, per the federal law is a step BACKWARDS, imo.
6. In most states, a motorized anything, with 2 wheels, going 20-30mph is likely a Moped, which usually requires a driver's license, etc. Speed pedelecs meet that definition.
So why would anything under 30mph and 750W, with a throttle, be classified at motorcycle status, but a speed pedelec is a bicycle? That is what the CA legislation does.
I think the States will see through this and hopefully correct it.
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