Tech

Do eBikes belong on the mountain?

Written by Lance Branquinho.

By Bike Hub Features · 2683 comments

It’s been a year. Since their arrival. These most unprincipled battery bikes, with on-board power aiding their propulsion.

Much like creeping taxation, quinoa everything in restaurants and mobile data pricing, the ebike draws our collective ire. Judgement is absolute and crushing. ‘It’s not a bike. It’s a motorbike… If you can’t ride, go spin on a Wattbike at Virgin Active. Get fitter… They’ll ruin trail access for all of us’.

A year on, from the first proper e-mountain bikes (e-MTBs) becoming available in South Africa, has sufficient time passed for reflection, and perhaps, appraisal? Well, before Pravin’s next budget, where ebikes could quite possibly become another tax revenue item, instead of an incentive – as they are in Europe, my feelings toward them have altered.

I should be the prototypical ebike hater. My mountain bike is a South African brand single-speed 26. Crisis. Could I be more fundamental in my traditionalism? Yet I’m conflicted about these battery mountain bikes.

They’re not motorbikes

Obvious for some. Less so for others. If you use the most sophisticated e-MTB available in South Africa, which is Specialized’s Levo, it’s categorically obvious that they’re not motorbikes. Mopeds would be a more plausible correlation, but without a throttle, and cranks which turn, the motorbike/motorped association is plainly false. And facetious.

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The Specialized Turbo Levo. Photo credit: Ewald Sadie.

These are mountain bikes with pedal assist battery motors. They’re not off-road motorbikes with single-crown forks. Components are sourced from the bicycle industry, instead of motorcycle supply chain.

The hate, though, is real. Online polls register disapproval numbers in excess of 80%, damning the e-MTB’s existence. But we all know the internet, with its self-appointed crusaders, is rarely within a margin of reflecting reality. In Europe, where cycling sources its history and hosts its most credible events (road/XCO/DH), e-MTB sales are near surpassing those of non-assisted – dare I say ‘conventional’ – mountain bikes. I’d always table sales statistics as the truest representation of acceptance and trend. With e-MTBs, there’s no invalidating the numbers: in parts of Europe, e-MTB sales are 50% up year-on-year.

Are they moral?

The primary salvo of criticism against e-MTBs has been ethical: if you work less, how dare you have access to my realm of adventure. Earn your turns.

In racing, certainly, there’s no argument that as e-MTBs become more sophisticated, there’s a risk of BB-battery motor solutions becoming sufficiently compact, to be near undetectable. Especially at races where organisers don’t have the sophisticated X-ray equipment.

E-MTBs don’t belong anywhere near a mountain bike race. Not even in a separate category. And if you analyse Specialized’s Levo, that’s hardly its purpose. This is a trail-bike: dropper seatpost, Pike fork. It’s not meant for stage racing. At all. It’s meant to enable those who have perhaps past their peak or are burdened by schedule or health issues, to recapture the thrill of trail exploration and riding.

It’s why I struggle with the enclave argument of having to earn your turns. There are riders in their 60s who are in great shape, examples of life-long discipline and training commitment. Age is a real keeper of ability, though, and why shouldn’t they have the privilege of participation on those fantastic five-hour Sunday trail rides? They’re the founders, with great stories, still chasing the thrill. Why deny them? Perhaps more meaningfully: why deny the unqualified excitement of a 60-year old refamiliarizing themselves with off-road cycling after four decades away from bikes?

Kids. Partners. It’s a similar logic. If your partner or offspring wish to join on a weekend ride, yet are petrified of the discrepancy in endurance between yourselves, why isn’t the e-MTB a great solution? It enables a thoroughly testing training ride for you, without risking the frustration of waiting at the top of each gradient for ten minutes.

They’re interested in this world unfamiliar to them, yet so beguiling to you, with its tremendous gatekeeping function of fitness. Is allowing family or a non-biking friend this glimpse of access, to aid understanding of your training commitment, really an unethical sacrifice before the mountain bike Gods? I struggle to think it could be the case.

ccs-62657-0-34321100-1488735725.jpgBMC’s concept electornic mountain bike.

Do they destroy trails?

Beyond the issues of ethical pedal assistance, trail destruction is the e-MTB-hater’s most vocal objection. The belief being that e-MTBs will enable riders so many runs, on a heavy bike, they’ll accelerate trail wear beyond all reasonable expectations.

It’s an absolutely rubbish claim, revealing an issue around trail wear and maintenance that’s conveniently ignored in South Africa: mass and bike set-up. Heavier riders, will harm a trail more. Heavier riders on relatively narrow, stage-race width tyres (at high pressures), will do this even more so.

Granted, The Levo is far heavier (22-and-a-bit-kg) than an aggregate South African rider’s bike, but the diversity in rider physiology rebalances this. How many rides have you been on where there are both 70- and 90kg riders? Exactly. The combined mass is what matters and most Levos, with rider, would equal the weight on many larger, fit, South African riders on their carbon marathon bikes. On a Levo, that mass contacts the trail through a much wider 27.5 plus tyre, which means less damage and potential brake lock-up.

Seeing the wood for the trees: e-benefits

As a purist, the concept of pedal assistance grates me. But I don’t live in an isolated Karoo valley all on my own. The momentum of trail access is empowered by participant numbers and people of influence – and they’re mostly mature stakeholders, unlikely to threaten Nino in a VO2 max test. If there are bikes that make these influential stakeholders ride more frequently and further, they’ll chair the negotiations for greater, lasting, trail access.

The burden of time, distance, and family are real. If your sanity and balance of zen depends on that specific singletrack descent, which is just too far from home within the time constraints of your scheduling, an e-MTB is not a tool for the lazy. It’s salvation for the committed.

Of all the unconsidered benefits of e-MTBs, safety is the outlier. Imagine a member of your riding group has an off in technical terrain, and you’re at the bottom of a valley, with the nearest mobile phone signal at the drop-in point you’ve just descended from. You have a problem. The ability of an e-MTB to get back up faster than anything else, and make that emergency call for help, might gain those crucial few minutes between a manageable evacuation and the delirium of an emergency evacuation.

Family. Kids. Dogs. Businesses which operate on weekends. I have none of these things in my life, but some of my friends do, and I’d like for them to have fewer excuses not to ride. It’s the reason I can’t bring myself to hate ebikes. Except when a 60-year old on a Levo is chatting away, whilst I’m close to exhaustion near the crest of a climb. Guess I need to train harder. eBikes make me a better rider. And I don’t even have one.

Comments

ChrisF

Apr 28, 2018, 4:11 PM

I thought we had solved this. No issues with Emotorbikes on the trails but they're a big no no in races

 

jaaaa, but that was on page 20 ... time to re-post all the same arguments ....  :devil:   :devil:

 

and in another 20 page we will rinse and repeat .....  :whistling:

 

and with each cycle there will be more ebike owners ....  :eek:

 

who knows, maybe Mr Thor himself may reconsider the purity of his posts ...  :cursing:   :devil:

Patchelicious

Apr 28, 2018, 4:23 PM

Jeeeeeezuz people can be sensitive.

 

Try understand what is being said and stop getting selectively upset.

Eldron

Apr 28, 2018, 4:36 PM

jaaaa, but that was on page 20 ... time to re-post all the same arguments .... :devil: :devil:

 

and in another 20 page we will rinse and repeat ..... :whistling:

 

and with each cycle there will be more ebike owners .... :eek:

 

who knows, maybe Mr Thor himself may reconsider the purity of his posts ... :cursing: :devil:

I do love the "single representative sample" argument... I met ONE guy on an ebike that rode like a tjop. Therefore they're ALL tjops. Its science. Bitches.

Thor Buttox

Apr 28, 2018, 8:52 PM

jaaaa, but that was on page 20 ... time to re-post all the same arguments .... :devil: :devil:

 

and in another 20 page we will rinse and repeat ..... :whistling:

 

and with each cycle there will be more ebike owners .... :eek:

 

who knows, maybe Mr Thor himself may reconsider the purity of his posts ... :cursing: :devil:

Chris, re-read both my post from 3 pages ago about ego and the one above. I am actually agreeing with all your posts about their place and their benefits. And if anyone thinks my representative sample is based on a tjop, they are wrong. Here they are used by everyone including posties to deliver mail. I had a lovely old fella zoom up behind me into a stiff breeze the other week while I was labouring under the misapprehension that I was a half decent cyclist. We chatted for a whole and then he zoomed off - HE said he knows he's not a 'pure' cyclist, apologised for not being able to wait to draft me. All perfectly civilised. Seems only in Africa are there so many labouring under their illusions - on BOTH sides.

 

Getting angry about my post above is exactly the converse of getting angry at those who don't want them on the trails at all - and that was exactly the point of my first post about ego.

Bonus

May 1, 2018, 9:22 AM

Yesterday lunchtime I was coming home to eat and as i came through our village an oldish couple flagged me down to ask me which was the road back to Ainsa. They were a French couple on hols and she was on an ebike whose battery was nearly flat.

I told them the easiest way was back down the road to the river and then along the river to Ainsa. It's all either down or flat. They were very grateful because she wasn't keen to drag a weighty ebike with a dead battery any further than she had to.

Coincidentally, the same couple were leaving the campsite that I'm currently working at this morning on their bikes and they recognised me and gave me a wave.

Robbie Stewart

May 2, 2018, 12:56 PM

Interesting post .....

 

Some may recall my posts about taking our little for skills training.  We have joined his couch on a number of rides since then.  On one particular ride there were a couple of families. 

 

One lady had not ridden a bike in about 20 years and were trying to get into it .... She happens to be a runner and had some seriously powerful legs and powered up the hills !!  Downhil she was super slow .... then the mini-burms from the pumptrack down to start.  She was going at less than walking pace !!!  To the point where she literally fell over in one of the turns.  I helped her up, gave some pointers and then followed her down, and kept on giving her pointers ... half way down she started relaxing a bit and managed to get from a crawling to a slow but steady pace.  A few more slow laps and she will be able to ride with her kids, and enjoy the trails as a family

 

There are MANY new riders at Meerendal !

 

Surely ill advised for a new rider to head on down to the mine-shaft though !  

 

But calling such new riders "posers" ..... maybe rather take a moment and assist them ?

 

 

 

reminds me of Sunday's ride with Maritz .... few months back I had to put my hand on his shoulder and help him up the steep hills.  Now he WANTS to ride up the steep hills, and he wants to do so without me helping him.  He may take a water-break halfway up, but no way may I assist !  And so we go from the pump track towards Dorstberg, up that first steep section, to join the contour line towards Burry Stander.  Obviously the last 40m is too steep for a 6 year old !  He gets off and pushes his bike up .... two riders encourage him ..... another takes a moment to tell me just how heavy a kids bike is and that I really should not let a kid struggle like that ...... meanwhile, Maritz is super stoked about having cycled the "old route" on his own and just how far he got on the new section under his own steam, wanting to go back to cycle even further ...... 

 

interesting how external perceptions often completely miss the reality of the situation.

 

I hear you, Chris, and I agree that one's perceptions are most often very far off the mark. Kudos to you for reminding me again.

 

That said, the dude in reference was more or less 2 / 3 years my junior. Still, we don't all have equal skills, and should be more tolerant of each other.

 

As for me, I generally crawl up Dorstberg, but boy oh boy, do I fly down...

Robbie Stewart

May 2, 2018, 1:07 PM

Been watching this thread with some amusement...

 

Coming from a totally different sport, It amazes me how critical, judgemental and brassy cylists are compared to some other sports...

 

 

You should see the battle between surfers, door-mats ( I mean body boarders) and egg-beaters (I means paddle skiers). There was even a battle being played out between short boarders and long boarders in my hey days of surfing. After shelving my surfing gear for a bicycle, I guess that now SUP is also being targeted.

 

I guess no matter what sport you are involved in, there will always be a level of prejudice involved.

 

But I still maintain, there is no valid excuse for being a door-mat.

Shebeen

May 2, 2018, 1:28 PM

coming to a grand tour near you!

 

http://road.cc/content/news/240223-giro-ditalia-launches-giro-e-e-bike-race-run-alongside-main-event

 

file-1-1024x683.jpg

 

 

You should see the battle between surfers, door-mats ( I mean body boarders) and egg-beaters (I means paddle skiers). There was even a battle being played out between short boarders and long boarders in my hey days of surfing. After shelving my surfing gear for a bicycle, I guess that now SUP is also being targeted.

I guess no matter what sport you are involved in, there will always be a level of prejudice involved.

But I still maintain, there is no valid excuse for being a door-mat.

that's the funny thing - they're totally accepted for some reason!

Hackster

May 2, 2018, 1:30 PM

I've been anti-ebikes from the get-go.

 

But I'm seeing more and more of them on the trails and they're behaving just like everyone else.

 

So I'm no longer against them.

 

Which I'm sure must be a massive relief to everyone who owns one...

Robbie Stewart

May 2, 2018, 1:40 PM

I've been anti-ebikes from the get-go.

 

But I'm seeing more and more of them on the trails and they're behaving just like everyone else.

 

So I'm no longer against them.

 

Which I'm sure must be a massive relief to everyone who owns one...

 

 

...until you're the one huffing and puffing up some steep ST climb, and some impatient person pulls up behind you on their e-bike screaming traaack...or straaaavaaaa

rorydewet

May 2, 2018, 2:40 PM

I thought we had solved this. No issues with Emotorbikes on the trails but they're a big no no in races

Before i say anything let me just say I am an e bike rider.

 

I agree E-Bikes dont have the right to compete side by side with normal bikes in a race. Its unfair.

 

That said in the last 94.7 cycle challenge there was an older dude who rode the 94.7 on an e-bike. It was a trial by the race organizers to see if E-Bikes could do a race along side road bikes. All I could assume was that they wanted to see if it was feasible for an e-bike to complete the course.

 

I think common sense will prevail and if they allow e-bikes to compete in the next 94.7 challenge they will keep e-bikes in a separate category and batch  and hopefully start them from the back of the batches to allow for less disruption to normal bikes.

 

Lets wait and see?

Eldron

May 2, 2018, 2:50 PM

Before i say anything let me just say I am an e bike rider.

 

I agree E-Bikes dont have the right to compete side by side with normal bikes in a race. Its unfair.

 

That said in the last 94.7 cycle challenge there was an older dude who rode the 94.7 on an e-bike. It was a trial by the race organizers to see if E-Bikes could do a race along side road bikes. All I could assume was that they wanted to see if it was feasible for an e-bike to complete the course.

 

I think common sense will prevail and if they allow e-bikes to compete in the next 94.7 challenge they will keep e-bikes in a separate category and batch and hopefully start them from the back of the batches to allow for less disruption to normal bikes.

 

Lets wait and see?

I say if it has a motor you don't get an official finishing time because...well...You haven't actually finished - you only rode a part of the course - the motor did the rest.

 

I'm all for ebike only races where you tune your bike and the best tuner/rider combo wins but to put motors in a human powered sport is just silly.

 

There is no pride in riding half a race.

 

My opinion of course. If they want an eslackers category its their decision. I will still consider all non medical Emotorbikes riders to be sub human:-)

T-Bob

May 2, 2018, 2:57 PM

the inside line on an bike race... not all vroom vroom and down. 

 

http://www.velonews.com/2018/04/mtb/e-mtb-race-fun-actually-pretty-hard_464311

Headshot

May 2, 2018, 4:07 PM

Something which may have been mentioned. To make use of all that power you still need to be able to ride your bike properly. Throw in some tech and the unskilled e bike rider is easy meat...

rorydewet

May 3, 2018, 9:45 AM

I say if it has a motor you don't get an official finishing time because...well...You haven't actually finished - you only rode a part of the course - the motor did the rest.

 

I'm all for ebike only races where you tune your bike and the best tuner/rider combo wins but to put motors in a human powered sport is just silly.

 

There is no pride in riding half a race.

 

My opinion of course. If they want an eslackers category its their decision. I will still consider all non medical Emotorbikes riders to be sub human:-)

 

and your entitled to your opinion

Patchelicious

May 3, 2018, 9:47 AM

and your entitled to your opinion

As are you, whats your point?

Bateleur1

May 3, 2018, 9:52 AM

They have been trying for years to sort out the licensed ladies at the big races now they are looking at bringing in an e-bike category?  This is going to be fun to watch.  Good golly.  :eek:

Patchelicious

May 3, 2018, 9:57 AM

They have been trying for years to sort out the licensed ladies at the big races now they are looking at bringing in an e-bike category?  This is going to be fun to watch.  Good golly.  :eek:

Separate races might be an answer?

Tristand

May 3, 2018, 10:13 AM

Separate races might be an answer?

 

Maybe more of a "non/limited-competitive event" rather than a race, open to all categories. 

Perhaps there is a term for this, gran fondo?

Eldron

May 3, 2018, 10:26 AM

I'm really looking forward to the furor after races when wannabes sit behind their ebike mates for a 100km draft. 

 

Motors and humans in one race is silly.

rorydewet

May 3, 2018, 10:32 AM

As are you, whats your point?

 

that he is entitled to his opinion

marcfr

May 3, 2018, 10:50 AM

I'm really looking forward to the furor after races when wannabes sit behind their ebike mates for a 100km draft. 

 

Motors and humans in one race is silly.

It's already happening, personally witnessed it in one recent road race.

Shebeen

May 3, 2018, 10:56 AM

I say if it has a motor you don't get an official finishing time because...well...You haven't actually finished - you only rode a part of the course - the motor did the rest.

 

I'm all for ebike only races where you tune your bike and the best tuner/rider combo wins but to put motors in a human powered sport is just silly.

 

There is no pride in riding half a race.

 

My opinion of course. If they want an eslackers category its their decision. I will still consider all non medical Emotorbikes riders to be sub human:-)

 

it's way more nuanced than that. did you finish the race if:

 

if you're a 12yr old kid stoking a tandem with dad

if you sat in the bunch the whole way catching zero wind

if you got a helping hand up the hills?

 

 

Ariane-Kleinhans-WithErik-120519FSC530.j

Eldron

May 3, 2018, 11:02 AM

it's way more nuanced than that. did you finish the race if:

 

if you're a 12yr old kid stoking a tandem with dad

if you sat in the bunch the whole way catching zero wind

if you got a helping hand up the hills?

 

 

Ariane-Kleinhans-WithErik-120519FSC530.j

Yup. Drafting is always going to be an issue in road racing. Motorbikes will add another fun aspect to it all.

 

It's part of the reason I stick more to Duathlon and MTB these days. Far less winging and drafting.

 

That's said - road racing in Denmark is pretty awesome. Its hard, tough and FAST. There is a reason why a country that has zero hills and only 6,000,000 inhabitants is churning out pro tour riders by the dozen!

Patchelicious

May 3, 2018, 11:35 AM

that he is entitled to his opinion

Cute

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