• @scrion
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    1324 days ago

    Yeah, but that is already illegal in 90% of the places, which makes it an issue not really related to the concept of an e-bike.

    I have been living in Europe for quite a while now, and e-bikes here are limited to about 15mph, e-scooters can go up to 12mph. While you can buy modding kits just fine, I haven’t seen a single modded bike in regular traffic in the last 9 years.

    There are higher powered devices that can legally go faster, but that means you need a helmet and a license plate.

    Let’s not claim that e-bikes and cargo e-bikes do not make a huge difference in cities and rural areas (for completely different reasons). It’s legislation and enforcement of the existing laws that suck, not the idea of a vehicle that can assist its driver.

    • @SuperIce
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      123 days ago

      In the US, class 1 and 2 ebikes have assist up to 20mph (class 2 is allowed a throttle, whole class 1 is only peddle assist). Class 3 can go up to 28mph (no throttle allowed), but is usually not allowed on bike paths.