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.

ccs-62657-0-68918100-1488554758.jpg

ccs-62657-0-68172200-1488735513.jpg
ccs-62657-0-49913100-1488735508.jpg

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

gummibear

Jul 23, 2019, 7:22 AM

ps....mostly were fairly new so business is booming in the bike market.

edkin

Jul 23, 2019, 7:34 AM

So we wait for a lady who we passed on the cycle lane while she was putting on her rain jacket.

 

Side note ... it was a cold, wet and nasty head wind home for us yesterday.

 

Now in our group was a mixed assortment of riders .... we wait and we wait for her, then she starts riding and we notice she is on a Giant e-bike....all good .... next thing she takes off around the group and leaves us behind like no ones business.

 

Moral of the story, next time we will not wait for an e-bike.

Don't blame the E-Bike. This is a gross misdirection of anger and frustration. the E-Bike is the innocent party here

Eldron

Jul 23, 2019, 7:43 AM

So we wait for a lady who we passed on the cycle lane while she was putting on her rain jacket.

 

Side note ... it was a cold, wet and nasty head wind home for us yesterday.

 

Now in our group was a mixed assortment of riders .... we wait and we wait for her, then she starts riding and we notice she is on a Giant e-bike....all good .... next thing she takes off around the group and leaves us behind like no ones business.

 

Moral of the story, next time we will not wait for an e-bike.

I was once treated badly by a human.

 

Morel of the story - f*ck all of you.

Hairy

Jul 23, 2019, 8:25 AM

I fixed your prejudice for you.  ;)

certainly not in our group ... we have some ladies that ride with us that will drop most guys on the road and other ladies that most guys only wish could ride as hard and fast on a DH / #Enduro trail as they do

 

the slowest rider in our group is also a guy BTW, and not me :P

 

we wait and try to cater for all riders, even roadies.

Hairy

Jul 23, 2019, 8:26 AM

Don't blame the E-Bike. This is a gross misdirection of anger and frustration. the E-Bike is the innocent party here

e-bike has no soul, it is not a nice steel single speed ..... so we can't blame the bike here

edkin

Jul 23, 2019, 8:46 AM

e-bike has no soul, it is not a nice steel single speed ..... so we can't blame the bike here

Agreed. My very point. Don't blame the E bike

Vetplant

Aug 12, 2019, 11:18 AM

Came up on my Twitter feed.... weird claim.

 

https://electrek.co/2019/08/11/electric-bike-riders-more-exercise-than-cyclists/

 

The writer is not making any friends in his writing style, don't know the exact phrase needed to explain his stance but it is somewhere between holier-than-thou and passive-aggressive towards cyclists.

SwissVan

Aug 12, 2019, 1:48 PM

So... i was lucky enough to be at the Lenzerheide round of the mtb world cup this weekend...Fri, sat and sunday.

 

The area has a large amount of mtb trails available in the summer months there were a lot of mtbkers over and above those of the competitors taking part

 

Just out of interest, I would say close to 50% of the bikes were E Bikes....

 

And the bike expo.... every brand had E Bikes on display..

 

#comradethefutureiselectric

Ettas

Aug 12, 2019, 2:14 PM

So... i was lucky enough to be at the Lenzerheide round of the mtb world cup this weekend...Fri, sat and sunday.

 

The area has a large amount of mtb trails available in the summer months there were a lot of mtbkers over and above those of the competitors taking part

 

Just out of interest, I would say close to 50% of the bikes were E Bikes....

 

And the bike expo.... every brand had E Bikes on display..

 

#comradethefutureiselectric

 

57.51% of people voting a certain way doesn't make it right....

ChrisF

Aug 12, 2019, 2:20 PM

Struck up a conversation on Saturday afternoon with a gent at Bloemendal.  He was testing a Giant ebike ....

 

I took it for a short ride in the parking lot, including a steep grass hill.  :w00t:

 

Man alive !!!  It feels different on the ebike !!  Dont think I want it for a day test .... I may well end with the same confused look .... knowing you "need" it, and trying to figure out how you gonna sell it to the wife ....  :whistling:

 

 

 

The gent remarked that this is the only way he can keep up with his son.  The son looked varsity age, and seriously fit.

Patchelicious

Aug 12, 2019, 2:35 PM

Struck up a conversation on Saturday afternoon with a gent at Bloemendal. He was testing a Giant ebike ....

 

I took it for a short ride in the parking lot, including a steep grass hill. :w00t:

 

Man alive !!! It feels different on the ebike !! Dont think I want it for a day test .... I may well end with the same confused look .... knowing you "need" it, and trying to figure out how you gonna sell it to the wife .... :whistling:

 

 

 

The gent remarked that this is the only way he can keep up with his son. The son looked varsity age, and seriously fit.

Equal outcomes vs Equal opportunity mentality

SwissVan

Aug 12, 2019, 2:41 PM

57.51% of people voting a certain way doesn't make it right....

 

Preaching to the choir bud....you know how many times i muttered "forking ebike" this weekend?

 

 

Fact is tho, lots of mountain bikers are buying them

Patchelicious

Aug 12, 2019, 3:23 PM

Preaching to the choir bud....you know how many times i muttered "forking ebike" this weekend?

 

 

Fact is tho, lots of mountain bikers are buying them

So if you have a battery and motor for your 15km loop at Redbarn, you are called a MTBer, but if you ride a normal MTB nonstop 370km through the desert with decent socks and no Camelbak you aren’t, but rather a fashionista?

 

#Logic

Mojoman

Aug 12, 2019, 3:54 PM

Gotta get myself one now....!

 

Electric bicycle riders have always known that e-bikes can actually be a great form of exercise. But a new study now shows that e-bikes can actually result in riders getting more exercise than standard pedal bike cyclists. Here’s why.

 

https://electrek.co/2019/08/11/electric-bike-riders-more-exercise-than-cyclists/?fbclid=IwAR3ValasJwdKso7-G6TX8F6B4Chuk5MsT53wrqlF5jfzbA-Ca93agtt941Y

Ashchest

Aug 12, 2019, 4:18 PM

The " the lycra-clad homeboys"    and  " these spandex enthusiasts"  

 

Sounds like the writer seriously doesn't like the fact that he cannot compete? 

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Aug 12, 2019, 4:22 PM

Struck up a conversation on Saturday afternoon with a gent at Bloemendal.  He was testing a Giant ebike ....

 

The gent remarked that this is the only way he can keep up with his son.  The son looked varsity age, and seriously fit.

I know that Mark Moir cannot keep up with his son Luke without an ebike, on the climbs. And Mark is a faaaaaaaarking strong rider, placing top in his age group and whipping a lot of younger riders. Luke is around that age, too. 

shaper

Aug 12, 2019, 4:25 PM

After my Club ride on Saturday, was heading back out Lansaria way from Broadacres to the N14, saw an ebiker pushing his bike up the rise over the N14 bridge.  Am guessing on his way back to Broadacres, but having run out of battery and not fit enough to pedal it....must have been a sole destroying walk and still having Cedar road hill to climb pushing his bike.

Patchelicious

Aug 12, 2019, 4:27 PM

After my Club ride on Saturday, was heading back out Lansaria way from Broadacres to the N14, saw an ebiker pushing his bike up the rise over the N14 bridge. Am guessing on his way back to Broadacres, but having run out of battery and not fit enough to pedal it....must have been a sole destroying walk and still having Cedar road hill to climb pushing his bike.

If he is too lazy to ride a normal bike, I doubt he pushed it all the way home. Probably found a tree and called an Uber

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Aug 12, 2019, 4:35 PM

If he is too lazy to ride a normal bike, I doubt he pushed it all the way home. Probably found a tree and called an Uber

I've honestly done that before. Halfway through a ride, chest pains, called an XL and left the rest to carry on after a coffee stop. Went to the ER the day after, diagnosed with bronchitis. 

 

So ja, possible. 

 

Also - those ebikes are HEAVY. As heavy as my old DH bike, weighing in at 25kg. Still rode that thing everywhere on a 36/11-36. That was torture

Robbie Stewart

Aug 13, 2019, 10:07 AM

So if you have a battery and motor for your 15km loop at Redbarn, you are called a MTBer, but if you ride a normal MTB nonstop 370km through the desert with decent socks and no Camelbak you aren’t, but rather a fashionista?

 

#Logic

 

Only if you stop at the coffee shop on the way...

Hairy

Aug 18, 2019, 5:01 PM

I've honestly done that before. Halfway through a ride, chest pains, called an XL and left the rest to carry on after a coffee stop. Went to the ER the day after, diagnosed with bronchitis. 

 

So ja, possible. 

 

Also - those ebikes are HEAVY. As heavy as my old DH bike, weighing in at 25kg. Still rode that thing everywhere on a 36/11-36. That was torture

36-36t = decent SS ratio ;P
Jewbacca

Aug 18, 2019, 5:12 PM

After my Club ride on Saturday, was heading back out Lansaria way from Broadacres to the N14, saw an ebiker pushing his bike up the rise over the N14 bridge.  Am guessing on his way back to Broadacres, but having run out of battery and not fit enough to pedal it....must have been a sole destroying walk and still having Cedar road hill to climb pushing his bike.

This made me laugh... Intentional or not.

SCD

Aug 18, 2019, 7:45 PM

It is a strange thing these days I find. As something new comes up people drop what they used to love and jump onto the new trend and talk about nothing else. Maybe it is boredom, maybe fomo, I don't know. I never really got it. In my windsurfing days it was kiting. Half my mates dropped windsurfing and started kiting. They asked why I don't try it? Darn, I wasn't living of an inheritance, had to work for my food, so I hardly had time to windsurf as much as I loved to. Now start something new? Why? I loved my sport. But there was this argument that one had to be excited to try something new and break out of the routine. Maybe. Or wasn't this what the marketeers whispered into our ears? Anyways...

Now the story repeats itself with MTB. We now NEED to try this eBike. It is the newest greatest thing. Yeah, probably it is pretty rad to ride, and I probably would really enjoy it. But does this mean I must have one? What is creating this link? Have we lost all sense of reason? Why do you love riding a bicycle in the mountains in the first place? I don't know. I love it because it gets me out to do some exercise, gets me out into nature, gets me to work my ass to get up this hill, gets me to overcome some fear when bombing downhill. I really enjoy that. The eBike allows me to do all this as well. Great, good for it. But I am already sorted and happy. Ah, but it allows you to ride more. Mooore. Faster uphill so you can fell like Nino, get more runs on the downhills, get further, ride 'better'. But really? Do we really need that? I still just spend my 2-3h out in the hills. I am happy with what I have. But anyway, that is just me.

I actually see very few of them out in the hills. And all in all they actually don't bother me too much. I luckily never encountered an eBiker that was such a ******** like those okes in some of those video clips. Just this whole hype is getting onto my nerves because you just cannot escape it...

Maybe you should just ride your eBikes more and stop talking about them all the time...

IceCreamMan

Aug 19, 2019, 6:45 AM

Was having my bike set up session with the owner of the local Giant store an we got chatting bout business and life in general as one does. He tells me ebikes are becoming a big part of his business as the population ages and people explore the benefits of being healthy and leading healthy lifestyles. I foten see Ebikes while out on the downs link generally ridden by older folk and that's superb. If it gets ppl out of the house and into nature and with health benfits at the same time then 2 thumbs up.

 

The owner was telling me about an 83 year old guy, who in his day was a top amateur cyclist in the UK who now runs out of puff on this training rides of 50 miles or so, answer was an e bike. (road) . how can we possibly have an issue with ppl exploring cycling?

Dieter!

Aug 27, 2019, 6:33 AM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=480&v=PaBix1n43sk
 

Not the most exciting racing... 

Add a comment

You must log in to comment