George S.
Well-Known Member
I was looking at the write-up on the Visiobike over on another ebike website. It's interesting because it combines two things that seemed like they would emerge in the next season or two. Those things are mid-drive and an 'automatic' transmission. My take on the Visiobike is that it too expensive.
I've been recovering from a catastrophic illness. I was really pleased a couple of weeks ago when someone flipped a switch and my lungs started working again. After a couple of months of real disability. So I have been studying a lot of stuff in the medical sphere, mind and body, rehab, exercise in general. I've read a lot on mobility scooters over the past two months. A lot of people get a lot of their lives back with a little electric cart they can sit in. I've used them a lot, to shop. Now it looks like I won't have to buy one, but I appreciate that ebikes are too small a field of vision. And the Visiobike narrows that vision to a tiny point.
Don't get me wrong. In three years every bike may have a mid-drive and a belt and self-shifting gearing. Will it really affect what I did (briefly) with my electric bike? Nope. Ideally, this technology could allow the motor to work efficiently most of the time. Of course, if battery technology evolves, you could just strap a bigger battery onto your bike. And there has to be a calibration of when a bike is too motorized to be a bike.
There is a 'push the envelope to infinity' attitude about fitness, probably about a lot of ebikes. Everyone needs a hobby. There is more to basic electric transportation (mobility) than advanced technology. It's curious how much innovation there is concerning ebikes. It's all innovation. On the other hand, the mobility scooter industry has been slow to adopt even lithium batteries. The 'best' scooter may be one with a 4 pound lithium battery and a folding system that make it very easy to transport. But most scooters have 30 pounds of batteries. Most powered wheel chairs are difficult without a van and ramp system. It is the interface between autos and mobility scooter/powered wheelchairs, that is tough.
Again, to me, it is curious that there is so much technology in ebikes, often pushing things to where they aren't really bikes. Pushing things to where it's almost a luxury item, a small and upscale market. And there is so little innovation in the mobility scooter arena, where people suddenly get their lives back, if the product works. Two different planets, far apart...Given the vast legions of boutique ebike makers, I think one or two should try to design a mobility scooter that just uses the technology people are applying to bikes. Might be more opportunity.
Finishing on fitness: One of my doctors says his personal trainer has him do 15 minutes at a heart rate of 180. I asked if that might be unhealthy, and he wasn't sure. Ohhh kay. I'm sure there is more to health than pushing simplistic things like heart rate. A hot item right now is the 'fitness monitor', Apps or wearable tech. Some of the information, like heart rate or calories burned, can be useful. But it seems like people can get hung up on the data stream, lose track of what is happening to them as they exercise. The Mayo Clinic says the best way to measure exercise intensity is how you feel. Sweating? Breathing hard? Uncomfortable? Too uncomfortable? How much attention should you pay to the read-out of heart rate or whatever? When you start the info gives you a calibration. I may be xx% fit with certain numbers. After that?
I've been recovering from a catastrophic illness. I was really pleased a couple of weeks ago when someone flipped a switch and my lungs started working again. After a couple of months of real disability. So I have been studying a lot of stuff in the medical sphere, mind and body, rehab, exercise in general. I've read a lot on mobility scooters over the past two months. A lot of people get a lot of their lives back with a little electric cart they can sit in. I've used them a lot, to shop. Now it looks like I won't have to buy one, but I appreciate that ebikes are too small a field of vision. And the Visiobike narrows that vision to a tiny point.
Don't get me wrong. In three years every bike may have a mid-drive and a belt and self-shifting gearing. Will it really affect what I did (briefly) with my electric bike? Nope. Ideally, this technology could allow the motor to work efficiently most of the time. Of course, if battery technology evolves, you could just strap a bigger battery onto your bike. And there has to be a calibration of when a bike is too motorized to be a bike.
There is a 'push the envelope to infinity' attitude about fitness, probably about a lot of ebikes. Everyone needs a hobby. There is more to basic electric transportation (mobility) than advanced technology. It's curious how much innovation there is concerning ebikes. It's all innovation. On the other hand, the mobility scooter industry has been slow to adopt even lithium batteries. The 'best' scooter may be one with a 4 pound lithium battery and a folding system that make it very easy to transport. But most scooters have 30 pounds of batteries. Most powered wheel chairs are difficult without a van and ramp system. It is the interface between autos and mobility scooter/powered wheelchairs, that is tough.
Again, to me, it is curious that there is so much technology in ebikes, often pushing things to where they aren't really bikes. Pushing things to where it's almost a luxury item, a small and upscale market. And there is so little innovation in the mobility scooter arena, where people suddenly get their lives back, if the product works. Two different planets, far apart...Given the vast legions of boutique ebike makers, I think one or two should try to design a mobility scooter that just uses the technology people are applying to bikes. Might be more opportunity.
Finishing on fitness: One of my doctors says his personal trainer has him do 15 minutes at a heart rate of 180. I asked if that might be unhealthy, and he wasn't sure. Ohhh kay. I'm sure there is more to health than pushing simplistic things like heart rate. A hot item right now is the 'fitness monitor', Apps or wearable tech. Some of the information, like heart rate or calories burned, can be useful. But it seems like people can get hung up on the data stream, lose track of what is happening to them as they exercise. The Mayo Clinic says the best way to measure exercise intensity is how you feel. Sweating? Breathing hard? Uncomfortable? Too uncomfortable? How much attention should you pay to the read-out of heart rate or whatever? When you start the info gives you a calibration. I may be xx% fit with certain numbers. After that?