RichardB
Slightly retro
- Location
- West Wales
As others have said, not cheating at all, and not just for the infirm or elderly. I used to commute 16 hilly miles each way in my 20s, but later in my life when I wanted to start again (different location) I had lost too much fitness through illness and inactivity. I was facing a 13.5 mile hilly journey each way, and I didn't reckon I would manage it. I got a Wisper 905 and started commuting last autumn. I knocked it off for the worst months and started again this spring. So far I have done about 1300 miles on it, I have lost 3 stone and my fitness levels are better than they have been for 30 years. I don't use it as a motorscooter, I pedal hard and I get a sweat on. At least half the time I am well over the 15 mph cutoff, and the assistance is really only on the hills. I am now doing a lot of miles at weekend on my pushbike and next spring I will sell the Wisper and start commuting using leg power only. Without the Wisper I would never have got to that stage.
It's a heavy lump and I wouldn't want to pedal it far unassisted, but it's an excellent commuter tool - comfy, solid and speedy. I can average 15-16 mph with it over some serious lumps, whereas on my normal bike I manage about 11-12. Working 12-hour night shifts, that's a useful time saving. I would recommend the Wisper highly, especially for a big rider.
For me, the accusation of cheating is nonsensical. No one claims that is it cycling, pure and simple. But it is a very useful way of getting around, and can have huge health benefits, as I have seen in my own life. If you are fit and healthy, you probably don't need one (although it might be fun to try), but to suggest that other people are wrong to use one smacks a bit of a rather unpleasant elitism.
It's a heavy lump and I wouldn't want to pedal it far unassisted, but it's an excellent commuter tool - comfy, solid and speedy. I can average 15-16 mph with it over some serious lumps, whereas on my normal bike I manage about 11-12. Working 12-hour night shifts, that's a useful time saving. I would recommend the Wisper highly, especially for a big rider.
For me, the accusation of cheating is nonsensical. No one claims that is it cycling, pure and simple. But it is a very useful way of getting around, and can have huge health benefits, as I have seen in my own life. If you are fit and healthy, you probably don't need one (although it might be fun to try), but to suggest that other people are wrong to use one smacks a bit of a rather unpleasant elitism.