If I have a e bike and I hit a Ferrari I'm running . lol
LITERALLY running using your feet, not trying to run on that piece of crap.
If I have a e bike and I hit a Ferrari I'm running . lol
LITERALLY running using your feet, not trying to run on that piece of crap.
I find it funny how on the survey under "sex" it has; "male," "female," then "other."?
What the??!
I guess you haven't read what other people, in particular I have written. These things may be 'no more dangerous' than a bicycle, but they are not BICYCLES (e-bicycles, whatever). You want them in a separate (regulated) category? Great. But like I said before, they are wide, bulky and slow - they block the road way more than a regular bicycle and put bicycles that try to pass them in danger.
Wider and slower? I'm a wide and slow person on my bicycle, I guess I shouldn't ever ride it. There's absolutely no way they put passing cyclists at risk; they even have mirrors and so are more likely to be aware of them. They aren't particularly slow either, 32km/h is a perfectly reasonable quick pace for the average cyclist. So they slow down the hyper-cyclists that can keep up with traffic in a 50, well that's a shame, so would I on a regular bicycle.
In any case, what would licensing and insurance do to solve your particular qualms with them? Other than utterly destroy the industry, that is.
I have never (yes, never) seen an e-crap doing anywhere close to 30 km/h in Toronto, and I work in downtown, so I see them every day, on the road and on the sidewalks. Pretty much every e-thing I see moves barely at 10-15 km/h - i.e. max. 2-3 faster than a person walking fast. I'll be glad if that "industry" will get "destroyed" as these contraptions don't belong on our roads. You want a bicycle - get a bicycle. You want a motorized vehicle - get a motorized vehicle. You're disabled - get a motorized wheel chair, which suits your disability. But don't crowd the road and don't put other people at risk.
The thing that bothers me about this opposition is so many don't seem to think the poor have a right to quick and easy transportation.
I believe most people use Ebikes due to affordability not because they have DUIs. I really doubt those people downtown had cars to begin with.
The thing that bothers me about this opposition is so many don't seem to think the poor have a right to quick and easy transportation. This industry is a blessing to so many people who maybe can't right a regular bicycle, for whatever reason, but don't wish to be constrained to public transit, and can't afford the outrageously high insurance in Ontario. Perhaps people just don't want to expend the effort to cycle; call them lazy, but they should have the right to choose a low powered (human-level power surrogate such as a 500 watt electric motor), bicycle alternative.
The bottom line is one cannot possibly think up a case where an ebike is a worse problem than a bicycle; speed, size, or otherwise.
A good chunk of the affordability comes from the fact that they aren't responsible for any damage that they cause. They don't have to have insurance, which saves them a good chunk of change and if they cause some damage, good luck getting the money to make up for it from them. That means that we pay to make their mode of transport affordable.
A good chunk of the affordability comes from the fact that they aren't responsible for any damage that they cause. They don't have to have insurance, which saves them a good chunk of change and if they cause some damage, good luck getting the money to make up for it from them. That means that we pay to make their mode of transport affordable.
A good chunk of the affordability comes from the fact that they aren't responsible for any damage that they cause. They don't have to have insurance, which saves them a good chunk of change and if they cause some damage, good luck getting the money to make up for it from them. That means that we pay to make their mode of transport affordable.
Anyone can cause serious damage to anything using any mode of transportation, even walking... If you think Ontario's insurance premiums are high because we're paying for things like E-bike accidents think again, it's just insurance companies taking people to the bank because no one is stopping them.
I think E-bikes should require a license but not insurance. They are enough like a scooter for people to need to prove they can operate it safely, but enough like a bicycle to not require insurance.
My opinion depends on what you're classifying as an "e-bike". I think the ones that actually look like bicycles and are basically just bicycles with power assist should be treated as bicycles. But those big stupid scooter things should be off the road (ideally) unless they can match traffic speed and require license and insurance.
My opinion depends on what you're classifying as an "e-bike". I think the ones that actually look like bicycles and are basically just bicycles with power assist should be treated as bicycles. But those big stupid scooter things should be off the road (ideally) unless they can match traffic speed and require license and insurance.