Ebike car free question.
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Ebike car free question.
Hey Guys, Just curious have a lot of car free or car lite people bought electric bikes? Just curious if this market segment were into ebikes. It seems like it would make car free living that much easier. If this subject has been beaten to death here already I apologize. I've not been on this forum in the past few years.
#2
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Hey Guys, Just curious have a lot of car free or car lite people bought electric bikes? Just curious if this market segment were into ebikes. It seems like it would make car free living that much easier. If this subject has been beaten to death here already I apologize. I've not been on this forum in the past few years.

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I would say it's practically at 0, or about 1% of the people here have E-Bikes as an alternative to cars, or as a help to not drive cars as much... So far, it's a fail in general, even for me, I want to use my E-Assist as a way to not use my vehicle, and, it is failing me,/I am failing... Why...??? I suspect it is because of the infrastructure/the way it is looked on as a last ditch way to get around by society, and my 60+years of indoctrination as to how things work/supposed to work...
The weather doesn't help either...

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I don't know if it's having any impact on car-free people, but almost all of the new in-town riders I see are on e-bikes. At present, I would say they are a significant, double-digit percentage, of all riders here in Eugene and growing (while the use of bikes in general is plummeting here and is on track to get to zero in 2024). My wife is interested in her next town bike being an e-bike, and I will likely follow suit not too many years later.
What's not to like? they're a mature technology that effectively makes you younger (assuming you were stronger when you were young). The price isn't too awful much more than what a decent none-electric bike would cost either. From conversations with my local bike shops, it appears that the only one that isn't seeing declining sales is the one that specializes in e-bikes.
What's not to like? they're a mature technology that effectively makes you younger (assuming you were stronger when you were young). The price isn't too awful much more than what a decent none-electric bike would cost either. From conversations with my local bike shops, it appears that the only one that isn't seeing declining sales is the one that specializes in e-bikes.
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#5
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Thanks B Carfree for some insight into the situation in Oregon!
The other thread on e-bikes was shut down but I was going to add that I was in a local bike shop the other day and one of the mechanics mentioned that e-bike sales have basically taken over and are selling in bunches through word of mouth. All of the bikes at the front of the shop are e-bikes.
He did not say but clearly implied that standard bikes were on their way out. He was already talking about them in the past tense.
As far as the maturity of the technology, I would say that 2019 is the first year when all of the major manufacturers have e-bikes designed from the ground up as e-bikes. In years past, many or most were simply standard bicycles with a large battery bolted on. Just slap your forehead "doh!" Homer Simpson type designs. Now, frame designs fully integrate the battery and motor and e-bike specific components are the norm: chains and tires for example. Specialized is charging a mint for their e-bikes and standard bikes but at least their R&D budgets are yielding good results: they've achieved a 40% increase in battery capacity with the same sized battery.
The tech curve is going to shoot sharply upwards from here on out with e-bikes entering the mainstream, available budgets ballooning and nicer and nicer designs becoming the norm.
This is not to say that all designs are uniformly impressive. There are clear duds and not quite there yet designs abound still. These are still early days. But it's relatively easy to find an e-bike which you would be proud to own and significantly fewer which are a distinct embarrassment a la Trek's Springboard rear suspension bikes.
The other thread on e-bikes was shut down but I was going to add that I was in a local bike shop the other day and one of the mechanics mentioned that e-bike sales have basically taken over and are selling in bunches through word of mouth. All of the bikes at the front of the shop are e-bikes.
He did not say but clearly implied that standard bikes were on their way out. He was already talking about them in the past tense.
As far as the maturity of the technology, I would say that 2019 is the first year when all of the major manufacturers have e-bikes designed from the ground up as e-bikes. In years past, many or most were simply standard bicycles with a large battery bolted on. Just slap your forehead "doh!" Homer Simpson type designs. Now, frame designs fully integrate the battery and motor and e-bike specific components are the norm: chains and tires for example. Specialized is charging a mint for their e-bikes and standard bikes but at least their R&D budgets are yielding good results: they've achieved a 40% increase in battery capacity with the same sized battery.
The tech curve is going to shoot sharply upwards from here on out with e-bikes entering the mainstream, available budgets ballooning and nicer and nicer designs becoming the norm.
This is not to say that all designs are uniformly impressive. There are clear duds and not quite there yet designs abound still. These are still early days. But it's relatively easy to find an e-bike which you would be proud to own and significantly fewer which are a distinct embarrassment a la Trek's Springboard rear suspension bikes.
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I have seen a lot of people planning to go car-free considering adding an e-bike because once one is car-free, practicality takes over. If a person needs to haul a big load of groceries or laundry, needs to go somewhere important while sick, tired, or injured, and if there is not a good public transit system or an Uber/Lyft option ... having a little help getting up the hills can make a difference.
An e-bike seems to be considered as a back-up/safety net, something to fall back on when a person needs a little help.
A lot of car-free folks seem to be retired, so obviously age is an issue. For some, it is that any good car-free plan should include a bail-out option. I have not seem many people considering replacing a car with an e-bike, but I have seen quite a few people going car-free planning on having an e-bike backup.
An e-bike seems to be considered as a back-up/safety net, something to fall back on when a person needs a little help.
A lot of car-free folks seem to be retired, so obviously age is an issue. For some, it is that any good car-free plan should include a bail-out option. I have not seem many people considering replacing a car with an e-bike, but I have seen quite a few people going car-free planning on having an e-bike backup.
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I don't know if it's having any impact on car-free people, but almost all of the new in-town riders I see are on e-bikes. At present, I would say they are a significant, double-digit percentage, of all riders here in Eugene and growing (while the use of bikes in general is plummeting here and is on track to get to zero in 2024). My wife is interested in her next town bike being an e-bike, and I will likely follow suit not too many years later.
What's not to like? they're a mature technology that effectively makes you younger (assuming you were stronger when you were young). The price isn't too awful much more than what a decent none-electric bike would cost either. From conversations with my local bike shops, it appears that the only one that isn't seeing declining sales is the one that specializes in e-bikes.
What's not to like? they're a mature technology that effectively makes you younger (assuming you were stronger when you were young). The price isn't too awful much more than what a decent none-electric bike would cost either. From conversations with my local bike shops, it appears that the only one that isn't seeing declining sales is the one that specializes in e-bikes.
#9
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I was very dismissive before as well, but once you start riding e-bikes there is no going back. It's immediately addicting.
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#11
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Hey Guys, Just curious have a lot of car free or car lite people bought electric bikes? Just curious if this market segment were into ebikes. It seems like it would make car free living that much easier. If this subject has been beaten to death here already I apologize. I've not been on this forum in the past few years.
It's more a fantasy or a pipe dream of e-bike shops and/or eco-social justice warriors. While I'm a fan of bike lanes obviously, and of encouraging greener forms of transportation, the efforts to promote cycling infrastructure are often so invasive and disruptive, it makes me question the intentions behind these efforts.
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I would add that for a cyclist who wants to go car-lighter or car-free, an e-bike might look like an appealing option ... but for most people for the price of an e-bike they could get a junk car which would offer ten times the utility. The idea of laying out serious money for a scooter or an e-bike would never occur to most people---unless they had a good job and multiple DUIs---Just the people you'd want on an e-bike.
#13
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There's a distinction between bikes that are in use vs annual bike sales. Every indication points to e-bike sales taking over in the next few years. Petersen says it's two years in the states, Cocalis says it's already 70% for mtb's in Europe. The bike industry has tried just about everything but sales have been flat or declining in every category except e-bikes.
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I'm going car free in January and am getting a kit for my bike. However, it is easily and fully removable so most of my riding will be sans motor. I will use it when I pull my trailer with 40 pounds of dog food on it to get up the one hill. The motor will allow me to do the few errands that require more effort than my 69 year old body can comfortably put out. And also allow me to do long distance errands by bike in a more reasonable amount of time. Would I go car free without it - yes, but this should make it easier and more efficient.
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Now, I did start off as a cyclist in this scenario, rather than an average citizen, but I'm a cyclist *because* I really, REALLY hate driving. I'm capable, I just hate it. And an e-bike I enjoy riding, versus a car I dislike that ALSO costs more, is no contest!
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Also, most of us are in shape for a long ride, or a ride carrying a big load of groceries. Most of us ride bikes.
That is why i mentioned "utility." For most people whose exercise consists of walking to the car and then to the job or store from the car, facing a ten-mile ride with 40 pounds of groceries or gear is a non-starter. And in most cases, those people don't have a couple months to prepare----the car died or whatever, and they need transport Today. Sure, they'd be better off if they got some exercise, and it wouldn't take long to develop the capacity ... but they A.) don't have the time and B.) don't have Any Such Desire.
Add to that that most people seem to have children, and a lot of people carry friends in their cars, to work and for errands. Add to that the weather---which in a lot of the country requires expensive gear to survive through a portion of the year (Try riding in New England or Wisconsin or any where in the top northern third of the nation in the winter without studded tires and Really good weather gear.)
Yes, the car costs more to operate---but that is not an issue. if a person can afford a beater car or n e-bike---generally the beater car can be had for less. Add the first insurance payment---poor people don't pay the whole year up front---and the car allows the person to keep going to work to pay for the car. And the car allows the person to go to the store, to take the kids to day care, to operate in any weather---and the car works when the body doesn't.
A few decades back I separated my shoulder in a bike wreck. I bought a really crap car, the cheapest possible insurance, and managed to stay mobile, fed, and employed for about a third of the cheapest e-bike---which is good, because the really crap car and the rest drained my bank account. An e-bike was never an option--they didn't exist---and in any case i couldn't ride Any kind of vehicle which required use of the injured arm.
If we are going to Rationally discuss social trends, we have to use a point of view closer to the majority of people and Not our own. If we want to wonder if e--bikes will become wildly popular ... well, most traditional cyclists seem to loathe them. A few see the possibilities as they age, or as a weaker cycling spouse can stay involved and the couple can ride together. So wanting to cycle-commute in terrain or at an age where that is extremely challenging like them---and all that is about one percent of the population, the remaining 99 percent of which sees anything to do with cycling as silly, dangerous, or both.
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Totally depends on where you live. Weather and culture matter. In areas that are already dense and maxed to capacity, biking is faster and easier and way less expensive. Will e-bikes replace trucks in mid-America, heck no. But I do believe they will supplant many commute vehicles in dense urban areas, in combination with public transit or on their own. I see it already in the Bay Area, where bikes are currently strong commute substitutes and e-bikes are becoming even more popular. In particular, retired folks here are buying up some pretty expensive e-bikes to ride around the Bay Area.
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Didn't know retired folks commuted.
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Double post and typos, deleted, see post 20!
Last edited by Buglady; 12-26-18 at 09:59 PM.
#20
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Also, most of us are in shape for a long ride, or a ride carrying a big load of groceries. Most of us ride bikes.
(Snip)
Add to that the weather---which in a lot of the country requires expensive gear to survive through a portion of the year (Try riding in New England or Wisconsin or any where in the top northern third of the nation in the winter without studded tires and Really good weather gear.)
(Snip)
Add to that the weather---which in a lot of the country requires expensive gear to survive through a portion of the year (Try riding in New England or Wisconsin or any where in the top northern third of the nation in the winter without studded tires and Really good weather gear.)
Then I rode a little further each day, and carried a bit more, and became stronger.... right up until a couple of invisible disabilities bit me in the ass, hence e-bike, but that is a long story.
Yes, the car costs more to operate---but that is not an issue. if a person can afford a beater car or n e-bike---generally the beater car can be had for less. Add the first insurance payment---poor people don't pay the whole year up front---and the car allows the person to keep going to work to pay for the car. And the car allows the person to go to the store, to take the kids to day care, to operate in any weather---and the car works when the body doesn't.
And I disagree vehemently with your "that is not an issue", but I have no idea where to even start, because it seems we are coming at this from totally opposing worldviews. To me, purchasing a car makes no sense whatsoever if I literally DO NOT HAVE the budget required to run it. I've been offered cars for free and have turned them down, because when I have $300 left out of my monthly pay after rent and (minimal) utilities, as has been the case for most of my life, I am using that to buy a bus pass ($100) and food; or I am going to use my bike and buy slightly more food, as well as clothing/equipment for said bicycle.
Do not tell me that can't be done, because that is my actual lived experience.
i was responding to the question of the thread, which was about e-bikes and being car free. I have not owned a car in 12 years and I do own an e-bike, which I believe qualifies me to chime in.
I work in a store which sells and services e-bikes, so I have had a lot of conversations with people who are thinking about going car-free or car-light, many of whom are not cyclists. (They also aren't people living in poverty, and I will absolutely concede that those are not going to be the same conversations, but that wasn't the question, I don't think). The people I am talking to are considering cycling as a viable transportation option *because* of the the availability of e-bikes.
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And I disagree vehemently with your "that is not an issue", but I have no idea where to even start, because it seems we are coming at this from totally opposing worldviews. To me, purchasing a car makes no sense whatsoever if I literally DO NOT HAVE the budget required to run it.
Also … yes I come from a different mindset than you. I live in a Shared reality, filled with people who drive and who think I am crazy because I bike everywhere. Actually, you live in that same reality ... but apparently you ignore all the other people.
So, to me, buying a car is not crazy … not for others, and not for me. I keep a car in my driveway because it is more convenient to have it, in case I need it, that to try to rent a car for occasional use. I have only driven once since April …. (and had a bike on the rack, to ride when I arrived) but the car allowed me to do what I needed, and I didn’t have to take time to arrange a rental, drop-off and pick-up, and all that. Worth it to me.
Difference between you and I? I don’t assume everyone who thinks differently is wrong. Just different.
E-biking Might grow, but it will still only serve a very small percentage of the population. Most people Prefer cars for reasons of comfort and utility, and don’t mind the cost.
You can out as big a trailer on your e-bike as you like, but you aren’t going to get four kids to different day cares and schools, along with all their sports equipment, book bags, and handhelds, and still get to work on time in most parts of North America.
All you have to do is stand on the side of any road anywhere in North America and you will see that the automobile or some variation thereon is by a HUGE margin the chosen form of transport. Motorcycles, mopeds, bicycles, and now e-bikes are all options—chosen by what one percent of the road users?
Anyway … people here love to argue. People don’t like to listen to one another and synthesize new points of view. It is always “With me or against me.”
You win.
#22
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You haven't looked at many of my posts, have you? I have been a year round cycle commuter in CALGARY - which is considerably farther north than your examples - for over a decade. And I wasn't in good shape when I started - I hadn't been on a bike in ten years. But there was a bus strike, and I could not afford a car - more on that in a minute - and I just figured stuff out. People can do that. I bought my winter clothing a bit at a time, and saved up for my studded tires, and made do.
Then I rode a little further each day, and carried a bit more, and became stronger.... right up until a couple of invisible disabilities bit me in the ass, hence e-bike, but that is a long story.
Here you HAVE to pay a year's insurance up front, and it's a couple of thousand, unless you can qualify for monthly payments, which I don't because I haven't had car insurance in this province before.
And I disagree vehemently with your "that is not an issue", but I have no idea where to even start, because it seems we are coming at this from totally opposing worldviews. To me, purchasing a car makes no sense whatsoever if I literally DO NOT HAVE the budget required to run it. I've been offered cars for free and have turned them down, because when I have $300 left out of my monthly pay after rent and (minimal) utilities, as has been the case for most of my life, I am using that to buy a bus pass ($100) and food; or I am going to use my bike and buy slightly more food, as well as clothing/equipment for said bicycle.
Do not tell me that can't be done, because that is my actual lived experience.
i was responding to the question of the thread, which was about e-bikes and being car free. I have not owned a car in 12 years and I do own an e-bike, which I believe qualifies me to chime in.
I work in a store which sells and services e-bikes, so I have had a lot of conversations with people who are thinking about going car-free or car-light, many of whom are not cyclists. (They also aren't people living in poverty, and I will absolutely concede that those are not going to be the same conversations, but that wasn't the question, I don't think). The people I am talking to are considering cycling as a viable transportation option *because* of the the availability of e-bikes.
Then I rode a little further each day, and carried a bit more, and became stronger.... right up until a couple of invisible disabilities bit me in the ass, hence e-bike, but that is a long story.
Here you HAVE to pay a year's insurance up front, and it's a couple of thousand, unless you can qualify for monthly payments, which I don't because I haven't had car insurance in this province before.
And I disagree vehemently with your "that is not an issue", but I have no idea where to even start, because it seems we are coming at this from totally opposing worldviews. To me, purchasing a car makes no sense whatsoever if I literally DO NOT HAVE the budget required to run it. I've been offered cars for free and have turned them down, because when I have $300 left out of my monthly pay after rent and (minimal) utilities, as has been the case for most of my life, I am using that to buy a bus pass ($100) and food; or I am going to use my bike and buy slightly more food, as well as clothing/equipment for said bicycle.
Do not tell me that can't be done, because that is my actual lived experience.
i was responding to the question of the thread, which was about e-bikes and being car free. I have not owned a car in 12 years and I do own an e-bike, which I believe qualifies me to chime in.
I work in a store which sells and services e-bikes, so I have had a lot of conversations with people who are thinking about going car-free or car-light, many of whom are not cyclists. (They also aren't people living in poverty, and I will absolutely concede that those are not going to be the same conversations, but that wasn't the question, I don't think). The people I am talking to are considering cycling as a viable transportation option *because* of the the availability of e-bikes.
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I define commuting as going the same place daily or near daily, regardless of whether it is for paid work or not. In that case, I commute. I do have somewhere I need to go every weekday - and set times I need to be there. Granted, the reason is unpaid but it's just as much fun as my work was =). Whether scheduled volunteering fits your idea of commuting is up to you. I get there by 9:30 a.m. every day, it's a 7 mile ride. Of course, I do leave earlier than I left work.
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And in places where there are no roads, people cannot drive. Where I lived when I separated my shoulder, I could make insurance payments--four in a year--with a financing fee.
You need to read my posts before you comment---as you suggested I do.
You work in an e-bike store and prefer to cycle to work. Potentially you have noticed … most people do Not work in e-bike stores, or even bike stores---and for every bike you pass, 500 cars pass you? And to all those drivers, the increased cost of owning a car is Proven not to be an issue—because they operate cars, not bikes.
Also … yes I come from a different mindset than you. I live in a Shared reality, filled with people who drive and who think I am crazy because I bike everywhere. Actually, you live in that same reality ... but apparently you ignore all the other people.
So, to me, buying a car is not crazy … not for others, and not for me. I keep a car in my driveway because it is more convenient to have it, in case I need it, that to try to rent a car for occasional use. I have only driven once since April …. (and had a bike on the rack, to ride when I arrived) but the car allowed me to do what I needed, and I didn’t have to take time to arrange a rental, drop-off and pick-up, and all that. Worth it to me.
Difference between you and I? I don’t assume everyone who thinks differently is wrong. Just different.
E-biking Might grow, but it will still only serve a very small percentage of the population. Most people Prefer cars for reasons of comfort and utility, and don’t mind the cost.
You can out as big a trailer on your e-bike as you like, but you aren’t going to get four kids to different day cares and schools, along with all their sports equipment, book bags, and handhelds, and still get to work on time in most parts of North America.
All you have to do is stand on the side of any road anywhere in North America and you will see that the automobile or some variation thereon is by a HUGE margin the chosen form of transport. Motorcycles, mopeds, bicycles, and now e-bikes are all options—chosen by what one percent of the road users?
Anyway … people here love to argue. People don’t like to listen to one another and synthesize new points of view. It is always “With me or against me.”
You win.
You need to read my posts before you comment---as you suggested I do.
You work in an e-bike store and prefer to cycle to work. Potentially you have noticed … most people do Not work in e-bike stores, or even bike stores---and for every bike you pass, 500 cars pass you? And to all those drivers, the increased cost of owning a car is Proven not to be an issue—because they operate cars, not bikes.
Also … yes I come from a different mindset than you. I live in a Shared reality, filled with people who drive and who think I am crazy because I bike everywhere. Actually, you live in that same reality ... but apparently you ignore all the other people.
So, to me, buying a car is not crazy … not for others, and not for me. I keep a car in my driveway because it is more convenient to have it, in case I need it, that to try to rent a car for occasional use. I have only driven once since April …. (and had a bike on the rack, to ride when I arrived) but the car allowed me to do what I needed, and I didn’t have to take time to arrange a rental, drop-off and pick-up, and all that. Worth it to me.
Difference between you and I? I don’t assume everyone who thinks differently is wrong. Just different.
E-biking Might grow, but it will still only serve a very small percentage of the population. Most people Prefer cars for reasons of comfort and utility, and don’t mind the cost.
You can out as big a trailer on your e-bike as you like, but you aren’t going to get four kids to different day cares and schools, along with all their sports equipment, book bags, and handhelds, and still get to work on time in most parts of North America.
All you have to do is stand on the side of any road anywhere in North America and you will see that the automobile or some variation thereon is by a HUGE margin the chosen form of transport. Motorcycles, mopeds, bicycles, and now e-bikes are all options—chosen by what one percent of the road users?
Anyway … people here love to argue. People don’t like to listen to one another and synthesize new points of view. It is always “With me or against me.”
You win.
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This really does all depend on where you live. Cargo bikes and bakfiets haul multiple kids and their crap around here and get most places faster because traffic is a snarly slow mess. I always reach my destinations faster than someone driving from the same starting point - especially if one factors in parking. Not only are e-bikes becoming more popular, but tiny e-cars are as well because everything is so close together here, you don't need to go very far (but it takes can take hours to go 12 miles!!!). In wide open spaces with lower density, e-bikes will remain a novelty. In tight urban spaces, they will be common. We have very easily accessible dockless car share for those that sometimes need a roof and doors. If you live where it's not set up with car share and bike share and e-bike share and road infrastructure and distances are very long, it's definitely not going to fly.
You are correct that elsewhere their use is probably unseen, if not unknown.