Why don't people want to pedal anymore?
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#152
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There is very little functional difference between a "pro road bike" and this type of e-road bike.
The club riders on these e-bikes often do the lead out in sprints, topping out at 28 mph. Coming around them at that speed takes in excess of 450 Watts.
You may protest that certain e-cruiser bikes require more watts to go 28 mph? Granted.
I'm not the one who made this unqualified, broad statement:
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1. I can spot a e-road bike by looking at it
2. I can tell by its speed roughly how much power it plus its rider is producing
Why? Because I ride with them, and I have a power meter.
Do I know that this or that e-bike is somehow limited to 445 watts? Of course not, what an odd question.
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#154
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Please note that many regular mountain bikes have down tubes fatter than what you are showing. It shows that you are trained in spotting E road bikes but not all e bikes.
My bad for making it sound as if I was stating some sort of law of physics. I also ride at the opposite end of the bike Sprectum from you.
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I met as guy on a group ride with (I think) a new Cervelo .... He was getting ready to take it off the rack on the back of his car, and I was admiring it generally when I noticed that the rear hub was as big around as the largest cog and maybe i00 mm wide. I asked and yes, it was a built-in e-assist. No one would ever know unless they followed closely. I only noticed because I was looking closely at every feature.
#156
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I love the idea of ebikes: they increase the accessibility of cycling, they enable people of differing fitness to ride together, they are great for commuting, they open up a huge range of new adventures. Ebikes themselves are great.
On the other hand, I'm less enthusiastic about how I actually see eBikes being used. As usual, people have to ruin everything:
- the defintion of "ebike" is getting more and more murky. Sure there are laws on the books restricting speed, throttle and power, but these laws are completely unenforceable. Some of the contraptions I'm seeing are just electric motorcycles under another name being used where they have no business being used. You can buy inexpensive, rickety 1,500 watt efatbikes with easily defeated speed restrictors very easily: https://www.amazon.com/AOSTIRMOTOR-E.../dp/B08XXB8K9L I see this type of "bike" all the time, usually being ridden by kids. Riding something with 1,500 watts of output isn't following the intent of allowing ebikes on "no motor vehicles" paths. People always have to push things...
- physically able middle aged people joining group rides on an ebike because they are too lazy to actually pedal. Yes this is judgmental, deal with it. This doesn't happen on the racing groups I tend to ride with, but it's becoming very common on the more recreational groups I see. Why does this bother me? The whole point of a group ride is to get exercise. eBikes deny the very intent of a group ride. It's lying to yourself. Riding at 17-18 mph is not that hard, stop being lazy. Similarly, physically able people using 600+ watts of ebike power to blast up a technical mountain bike climb others spend years trying to clean. What is the point? Get a dirt bike if that's what you want to do.
- e-mountain bikers using "no motorized vehicle" trails that other riders spent years trying to gain access to. As the definition of an "ebike" is extremely fuzzy right now, this opens up all kinds of potential access issues that are just going to get worse as ebikes become ever more powerful.
- If you shortcut your way to speed by putting a motor on your bike, you haven't learned how to handle a bike at speed. For example, a guy on an ebike a couple of months ago who got irritated with me because I dared to pass him on a wide open rural gravel MUP at 22mph. He subsequently blasted past me, missed a turn and crashed into a tree. Moron.
On the other hand, I'm less enthusiastic about how I actually see eBikes being used. As usual, people have to ruin everything:
- the defintion of "ebike" is getting more and more murky. Sure there are laws on the books restricting speed, throttle and power, but these laws are completely unenforceable. Some of the contraptions I'm seeing are just electric motorcycles under another name being used where they have no business being used. You can buy inexpensive, rickety 1,500 watt efatbikes with easily defeated speed restrictors very easily: https://www.amazon.com/AOSTIRMOTOR-E.../dp/B08XXB8K9L I see this type of "bike" all the time, usually being ridden by kids. Riding something with 1,500 watts of output isn't following the intent of allowing ebikes on "no motor vehicles" paths. People always have to push things...
- physically able middle aged people joining group rides on an ebike because they are too lazy to actually pedal. Yes this is judgmental, deal with it. This doesn't happen on the racing groups I tend to ride with, but it's becoming very common on the more recreational groups I see. Why does this bother me? The whole point of a group ride is to get exercise. eBikes deny the very intent of a group ride. It's lying to yourself. Riding at 17-18 mph is not that hard, stop being lazy. Similarly, physically able people using 600+ watts of ebike power to blast up a technical mountain bike climb others spend years trying to clean. What is the point? Get a dirt bike if that's what you want to do.
- e-mountain bikers using "no motorized vehicle" trails that other riders spent years trying to gain access to. As the definition of an "ebike" is extremely fuzzy right now, this opens up all kinds of potential access issues that are just going to get worse as ebikes become ever more powerful.
- If you shortcut your way to speed by putting a motor on your bike, you haven't learned how to handle a bike at speed. For example, a guy on an ebike a couple of months ago who got irritated with me because I dared to pass him on a wide open rural gravel MUP at 22mph. He subsequently blasted past me, missed a turn and crashed into a tree. Moron.
Last edited by Hiro11; 09-11-22 at 01:53 PM.
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#157
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Yea I don't understand E-bikes at all. Seems to defeat the entire purpose of riding. I'm sure they're fun of course
Spending $10k on a nice e-bike seems insane when you can get a sweet motorcycle of any variety at that price
Spending $10k on a nice e-bike seems insane when you can get a sweet motorcycle of any variety at that price
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$10 k for a wimpy ebike? I have a friend who got a one-owner 650 cc BMW adventure bike (on/off motorcycle) in great shape for about $7 K
On the other hand he laughs at me because my bike collection cost me about that much ......
On the other hand he laughs at me because my bike collection cost me about that much ......
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Not everyone has the same goals from riding, and I expect that particularly off road lots of people would love the idea of going trail/mountain biking without having to pedal so hard. Sales must be doing pretty well for a reason!
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Common tactic employed in TV/online/cable commercials": at the outset a character states a problem .... which maybe doesn't exist, but who cares? "Don't you hate it when your laundry doesn't smell fresh right after you wash it?"
Yeah, I would hate that if that were ever a thing. But it isn't; it is calculated nonsense, meant to introduce a new and wholly unnecessary product, time- and heat-released laundry perfume, which "preserves the 'just-washed' scent for up to two weeks!!!" (as if no one would wash a garment more often than that if it had a bad odor? Whatever, none of this is real.) It is a common tactic---you create a perceived need for a product and then "solve the problem" with your "new and improved" product.
Much as with many threads .... OPs create an imaginary problem, exaggerate a problem, fictionalize a problem, and post here to get attention. Chain wax, platform pedals, e-bikes .... how Big Bike is forcing us to ride what we hate riding, and aliens (or foreigners) are preventing us from owning the recumbents we all secretly crave .... whatever.
Why can people sell perfume for the laundry which is washed with detergent containing perfume? Because people don't think.
If a person cannot ride an e-bike without hitting other people said person will not be riding an e-bike for long---said person will crash and get hurt. But ... no one is going to respond with great emotion to a thread about mundane and unconcerning situations .... so a little of the spice of exaggeration and the occasional flavorful fiction gets tossed in, and the resulting stew keeps us all stewing for several pages.
There are those trolls who are obnoxious and confrontational and love to pick fights and act superior .... and there is a more subtle form of fishing for attention which is not so objectionable but in fact has the same purpose, the same intent.
I just toss chum in the water to see the fish flop about chasing it .... but i for sure know when I am eating food versus chasing a lure -- or mixing metaphors.
Maybe we should put clipless pedals on e-bikes so the inept and immature will all fall over a lot and quit riding?
Yeah, I would hate that if that were ever a thing. But it isn't; it is calculated nonsense, meant to introduce a new and wholly unnecessary product, time- and heat-released laundry perfume, which "preserves the 'just-washed' scent for up to two weeks!!!" (as if no one would wash a garment more often than that if it had a bad odor? Whatever, none of this is real.) It is a common tactic---you create a perceived need for a product and then "solve the problem" with your "new and improved" product.
Much as with many threads .... OPs create an imaginary problem, exaggerate a problem, fictionalize a problem, and post here to get attention. Chain wax, platform pedals, e-bikes .... how Big Bike is forcing us to ride what we hate riding, and aliens (or foreigners) are preventing us from owning the recumbents we all secretly crave .... whatever.
Why can people sell perfume for the laundry which is washed with detergent containing perfume? Because people don't think.
If a person cannot ride an e-bike without hitting other people said person will not be riding an e-bike for long---said person will crash and get hurt. But ... no one is going to respond with great emotion to a thread about mundane and unconcerning situations .... so a little of the spice of exaggeration and the occasional flavorful fiction gets tossed in, and the resulting stew keeps us all stewing for several pages.
There are those trolls who are obnoxious and confrontational and love to pick fights and act superior .... and there is a more subtle form of fishing for attention which is not so objectionable but in fact has the same purpose, the same intent.
I just toss chum in the water to see the fish flop about chasing it .... but i for sure know when I am eating food versus chasing a lure -- or mixing metaphors.
Maybe we should put clipless pedals on e-bikes so the inept and immature will all fall over a lot and quit riding?
#162
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I bought an E bicycle to expand adventure and recreation. I justify the E bicycle on the fun factor alone and nothing else. The E bicycle that I would love to have is $20k and that does not come with climate control, heated saddle and heated bar grips.
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I treat e-bikes like motorcycles. I prefer to ride routes where I have little contact with either.
IMHO, they are noisy little beasts and I find both equally annoying. Only once have I had a friendly passing of an e-bike with an older man in the mountains of SoCal. He was switching his battery as I passed him.
Otherwise, it is noisy fat e-MTB's with 4" treads coming from behind me on a MUP. They are exceeding 20+mph and soft pedaling if at all.
Whatever, get your groove on and enjoy the outdoors but I do not want to mingle with you.
IMHO, they are noisy little beasts and I find both equally annoying. Only once have I had a friendly passing of an e-bike with an older man in the mountains of SoCal. He was switching his battery as I passed him.
Otherwise, it is noisy fat e-MTB's with 4" treads coming from behind me on a MUP. They are exceeding 20+mph and soft pedaling if at all.
Whatever, get your groove on and enjoy the outdoors but I do not want to mingle with you.
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I think the reality is that most people never really wanted to pedal to start with.
Some folks on eBikes were riding regular bikes because there was no better alternative. They did’t WANT to pedal, they just had to.
Some folks on eBikes never rode normal bike much at all… Because they don’t like pedaling.
The overwhelming majority of eBikes I see are in urban settings and used for commuting/utility/transportation rather than fitness.
Some folks on eBikes were riding regular bikes because there was no better alternative. They did’t WANT to pedal, they just had to.
Some folks on eBikes never rode normal bike much at all… Because they don’t like pedaling.
The overwhelming majority of eBikes I see are in urban settings and used for commuting/utility/transportation rather than fitness.
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The saddest thing are the middle aged frumpy couples on ebikes. I just want to force them to listen to how my pedal bike ended my back pain, dropped my blood pressure 25 points, and helped me from becoming so fat that I cant get off the couch. Im not sure the industry nor the gubment has done much as far as promoting the health benefits of cycling.
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Over here in Europe more and more school children are also riding e-bikes. I get it when you have to ride 15 KM (~10 miles?) a day to school and back, but other than that I don't really get it. How else are you going to build grit?
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#168
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I think the reality is that most people never really wanted to pedal to start with.
Some folks on eBikes were riding regular bikes because there was no better alternative. They did’t WANT to pedal, they just had to.
Some folks on eBikes never rode normal bike much at all… Because they don’t like pedaling.
The overwhelming majority of eBikes I see are in urban settings and used for commuting/utility/transportation rather than fitness.
Some folks on eBikes were riding regular bikes because there was no better alternative. They did’t WANT to pedal, they just had to.
Some folks on eBikes never rode normal bike much at all… Because they don’t like pedaling.
The overwhelming majority of eBikes I see are in urban settings and used for commuting/utility/transportation rather than fitness.
I've considered an e-bike for commuting to work so I won't show up to the office all sweaty. But that would be the only reason why.
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The exercise benefit of a bike that doesn't get ridden is zero.
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Metabolic and Cardiovascular Responses to a Simulated Commute on an E-Bike
The faster times and the lower perceived exertion associated with the e-bike may incentivize active transportation. Further, while the cardiometabolic responses (e.g., HR and V̇O2) were lower for the e-bike, they were indicative of being at or near “moderate intensity,” suggesting that e-bike use may still benefit health-related fitness.
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Last edited by terrymorse; 09-12-22 at 09:42 AM.
#170
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I am a people, I still love to pedal. I will not say never, but I do not see myself owning an e-bike. That is certainly open to change, given the right, or wrong, circumstances. If it becomes a way to keep me involved in cycling and outdoors, I would certainly consider it. However, for me, I just do not think it would the same for me as actually being the sole power source. The meditational aspect, the pedal stroke and the breathing, are a huge part of my cycling enjoyment. I will add, I believe, the feeling of accomplishment would be significantly lessened if powered by another source.
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#171
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The saddest thing are the middle aged frumpy couples on ebikes. I just want to force them to listen to how my pedal bike ended my back pain, dropped my blood pressure 25 points, and helped me from becoming so fat that I cant get off the couch. Im not sure the industry nor the gubment has done much as far as promoting the health benefits of cycling.
No way can you force anybody to do something or quit something he just doesn't want to or not ready to. He has to convince himself just as my Dad did when he quit smoking after I left home.
So for those fat sedentary people who are on ebikes, I say that's a huge step because there still are many more still in their cars. I wouldn't push them too far because 1) they have removed themselves from traffic congestion; and 2) they are making bike lanes useful so that less motorists will be complaining that no one uses bike lanes. As for bad biking, that is no different from bad driving except it's not as fatal. So we all have to work on that together but not as separate issues.
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#172
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But the cyclists’ results were not all uniform or constructive. A few riders’ efforts, especially when they used the higher assistance setting on the e-bikes, were too physiologically mild to count as moderate exercise. Almost everyone also burned about 30 percent fewer calories while e-biking than road riding — 344 to 422 calories per hour, on average, on an e-bike, versus 505 calories per hour on a regular bike — which may be a consideration if someone is hoping to use bike commuting to help drop weight.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/19/w...-workouts.html
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Door to door selling is hard.
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