summerdays
Cycling in the sun
- Location
- Bristol
I have certainly read on another forum (non-cycling) of someone who bought the parts to make an electric bike which he also modified to remove the restriction.
There's an article on them in Cycling Active (ironic) this month. The thing is that we see them as an alternative to bikes, whereas most users and buyers see them as an alternative to cars. And, compared to cars, they are fantastically green.Just how green are those things? Batteries/charging/production?
Plus also enabling some cyclists to keep going later in life ... as a elderly neighbour of mine uses his to cover reasonable distances, but I normally see him pedalling it even when going uphill so I assume it is just used as he needs it.
So, your neighbour will need to keep pedalling to get anywhere.http://www.croydon-lcc.org.uk/downloads/200412_DfT_ElectricAssistPedalCycles.pdf
"...the electrical assistance is cut off when the machine reaches a speed of 25km/h or where the cyclist stops pedalling. "
No sorry I wasn't clear - I meant that I think he seems to pedal it most of the time as if it was a normal bike just that it takes some of the strain out of the hills around here. As far as I remember he had a normal bike previously. His twin brother used to use the bike (I could never work out if they had one each or shared the one bike), until he died a couple of years ago. Never saw them on the bike at the same time.As pointed out by CP a few posts back, legal electrical-assist pedal cycles (EAPCs) can only assist pedalling, they can't be the "twist'n'go" solution.
I think that you were perfectly clear. My response was meant to confirm that he would need to pedal it just like a normal bike. That is part of the legal requirement to be exempt from motor vehicle regulations.I meant that I think he seems to pedal it most of the time as if it was a normal bike just that it takes some of the strain out of the hills around here.
Looks to me like the restriction (if any) has been taken off and it can now do more than 15mph. If so, then I am sure it should be classified like all powered road vehicles and taxed/tested/insured and registered.