Stefan Mikes
Gravel e-biker
- Region
- Europe
- City
- Mazovia, PL
A concise, elegant and clear explanation in the form best understood by Americans.Fat tires enjoyed a blip of popularity in the MTB world several years back. They had gone back to the niche for which they were originally developed (sand and snow) before ebikes took them up as a cheap way to make the bike ride more "comfortably". I think rad popularized this with the original rad rover circa 2016? They have their advantages; for moderate speed commuting they are cheap way to get some cushion and give decent traction on soft surfaces, but generally are slow rolling and squirmy in corners (unless you inflate them to a higher psi in which case you lose the cushioning and float, or you run some of the new breed of fat tires that are designed for high powered emotos and are basically moto tires).
As for why Spec doesn't sell an e-fat, I think its likely a combination of 1: not wanting to compete at the low end with the flood of cheap chinese imports, 2: marketing to traditional cyclists who generally aren't interested in fat bikes, 3: mainly selling at the high end where there is budget to solve the issues fat tires solve in a more effective way (with actual suspension and better quality tires), and 4: selling legally compliant bikes which don't have thousands of watts to spin up heavy tires.
Thank you, jabber!