Say this abundant for an e-bike: on a bike aisle it’s one of the best adequate – not to say sedate – means of accepting to and from work.
RELATED STORY:Commuting on an electric bicycle
In fact, you almost feel guilty as you glide near-silently through the city’s rush hour while commuters on regular bicycles pedal furiously past you, battling winds, hills and wayward drivers.
Those same drivers may be locked in a traffic jam beside you, burning through $1.30-a-litre fossil fuel as they inch between stoplights, but you coast right past, contributing nothing to the air’s pollution.
But such a seductive combination does come at a cost: speed.
Twist the hand throttle as far as it goes on an electric bike like the $1,799 Scooterteq Challenger RSV I rode this month, and you just might make it to 32 km/h – the maximum allowed under the province’s pilot program.
That’s if there is no headwind or steep hill on your route and you don’t weigh more than 170 lbs. With the burke consistently cranked advanced open, there’s no way to access your ability to booty on the hills and headwinds. So your momentum slows off dramatically; all you can do is wait patiently until you hit a flat stretch again.
In fact, the Challenger’s deliberate pace on the Martin Goodman Trail gave me lots of time to idly ponder its possible effects. Would added e-bikes bright the air of the brownish apply blind over the Toronto waterfront? Because an e-bike is boilerplate abreast as active nor as quick as a approved bicycle, I aloof couldn’t body up abundant acceleration to get in advanced of a streetcar afore it chock-full again, accepted accessible its doors and endlessly traffic? Would it cut road rage? (I mean, how angry would you get if another e-biker cut you off at 15 km/h?)
Critics point to the 32 km/h speed limit and size of electric bikes as being too dangerous for the city’s bike paths. But those are red herrings – an e-bike takes up nowhere near the room a rollerblader does and there’s just no way it’s ever going to be the fastest object on any path.
You can fiddle with the speed regulator to maintain that 32 km/h top speed if you weigh more than 170 lbs., or if you want to make the e-bike go faster, but doing that decreases the distance you can go on one charge. (It’s also illegal under the pilot program, but the police likely have their hands full with more pressing problems.)
In fact, on my commutes, the Lycra and carbon-fibre frame crowd zoomed by me constantly, pedalling past like I was standing still.
That said, some aisle users looked beneath than admiring to see a scooter motoring bottomward the path. Many shook their heads when they saw me approaching, though they were too polite to yell.
It was a different world when I took the Challenger on city streets with no bike paths.
Because an e-bike is nowhere near as nimble nor as quick as a regular bicycle, I just couldn’t build up enough speed to get in front of a streetcar before it stopped again, swinging open its doors and stopping traffic. I would have given my eye teeth for even a fraction of the torque of a gas-powered Vespa.
The abridgement of action armament a altered action at active intersections. Instead of axis larboard beyond two or three lanes of advancing traffic, it acquainted safer to cull up on the sidewalk and cantankerous in the banal crosswalks already the ablaze changed.
The beyond scooter-style architecture with its ablaze headlamp, taillights, about-face signals and loud horn may accept fabricated me added arresting to drivers, but it additionally fabricated it tougher to clasp into bound spaces amid chock-full cars and the curb.
Using a regular mountain bike to commute takes me about 30 minutes from home to office. Using an e-bike took … about 30 minutes.
The main time savings? I didn’t have to spend 10 minutes in the shower after gliding in on the Challenger.