Nameless Range
Well-known member
. I have never used one and don’t know how much of an advantage they give (or don’t).
I've shared this before, but in terms of their advantage:
https://helenair.com/news/beat-feet...cle_647ac759-94a9-5764-bcce-23615e46aea6.html
A 2019 Brigham Young University study found dramatic differences in rider capability on pedal bikes compared to e-bikes. Using a powered bicycle with just a third of the allowable booster force, riders completed a 5.5-mile course with 50 percent faster speed and significantly lower heart rates than those relying on their leg strength alone. That was with a 250-watt e-bike, one-third the capacity of full-strength 750-watt e-bike boosters.
Meditate on that when it comes to the trails you hike or bike to hunt. Over 5 miles, 50% faster, and easier, on an e-bike with 1/3 the wattage than folks would like to allow on non-motorized trails.
There's more studies out there showing similar results, but I'll also note that the Montana bill in reference that I resurrected this thread for, would allow all three classes of ebikes to be deemed nonmotorized - so even ebikes with throttles. This is new technology, is already disruptive, and the motor in an ebike is real. In an exploding west with wildlife under duress chiefly due to recreation in so many places, the judicious answer is obvious.