Old 03-01-17 | 12:25 AM
  #94  
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kickstart
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Joined: Feb 2014
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From: Kent Wa.

Bikes: 2005 Gazelle Golfo, 1935 Raleigh Sport, 1970 Robin Hood sport, 1974 Schwinn Continental, 1984 Ross MTB/porteur, 2013 Flying Piegon path racer, 2014 Gazelle Toer Populair T8

Originally Posted by jgadamski
Research suggests the more bikes out there, the safer it is for all. Fatalities and collisions remained constant as use quadrupled. Motorists are perhaps more aware, and that cannot be bad.
Adding assisted bikes will probably mean more less experienced riders . There is a ebike store on my commute and I have dropped by, checked them out and considered them as perhaps an option as my body ages. Beyond my situation, it is not hard to imagine where they might offer options to a variety of needs.
Increased mode share is not a bad thing, in general. However I remember when the CB radio went from a pleasurable hobby and a useful tool to absolute dysfunction owing to hordes of overwhelming numbers. Safe facilities are rare enough throughout the country, would every MUP or separated roadway be overwhelmed as a result?
There's a learning curve with each advancement, people will adapt, and facilities will evolve. Personally as it stands today in reality, the actual benefits far outweigh such imagined "what if's".

Last edited by kickstart; 03-01-17 at 12:31 AM.
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