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

Headshot

Nov 13, 2019, 12:00 PM

Sheesh.... Saturday.... an event.... rather large and rotund person on a zooty e-bike with a nice metallic paint job. Flat start... followed by a longish downhill of farm road....followed by some fairly steep and slightly technical ascents. E-biker comes bailing like hell past everyone else out the starting gates and down the road...only to completely flake out on the climb (lack of grunt or of skill, I just don't know), holding everyone else up as they try to work their way around the said e-biker.... [emoji85]

 

I wonder if they don't sometimes induce overconfidence in people who would be better off starting out at a more modest level? Oh well, not like some normal bike riders don't do the same I suppose.

Perhaps he forgot to charge it - or switch it on? 

 

Then there was the story about an eBiker who forced some elderly riders off the single track as he tried to crack his E Assist Strava time at Tokai recently...

MTBeer

Nov 13, 2019, 1:08 PM

Perhaps he forgot to charge it - or switch it on? 

 

Then there was the story about an eBiker who forced some elderly riders off the single track as he tried to crack his E Assist Strava time at Tokai recently...

run of the mill MTBers have been doing that for years. Being on an E-bike doesn't make you a knob. Being a knob makes you a knob.

 

No I don't have or want an E-bike. Yet.

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Nov 13, 2019, 1:15 PM

Perhaps he forgot to charge it - or switch it on? 

 

Then there was the story about an eBiker who forced some elderly riders off the single track as he tried to crack his E Assist Strava time at Tokai recently...

Sadly that would have happened if he were on a normal bike, too. That sort of attitude is typical of your more "A-Type" personalities. Or, in another language, fuggin cuuuunts. 

lechatnoir

Nov 13, 2019, 2:11 PM

Perhaps he forgot to charge it - or switch it on? 

 

Then there was the story about an eBiker who forced some elderly riders off the single track as he tried to crack his E Assist Strava time at Tokai recently...

 

this is more a case of 'do dwisses belong on the mountain' rather than e-bikes... what a pity for all parties

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 5:09 PM

A friend came over from Hong Kong today for a wedding, and we decided to squeeze in a ride, I usually struggle to ride with him coz he is very fit (like very - won Berg and Bush mid week, W2W mid week, 3rd in 36One, and top 50 at the Epic). So I usually push myself int the red when I ride with him, which although nice is a bit of punishent. Anyway, he didn't bring a bike over so he had to hire one - and all that was available was an ebike from Ride Inn. I borrowed my old man's ebike for a day.

 

I just upped the assistance a bit more than he did and we could ride quite comfortably together today. We did Status Quo, Iron Monkey, Plumber, and Firehut - all top to bottom in just over 3 hours. Flipen impressive.

 

An ebike will never ever replace my normal enduro bike, but (one day) I will buy myself something like the new Spez Kenevo with a double crown fork - for a day like today an ebike was just the best tool for the job. Loved it.

Patchelicious

Nov 13, 2019, 5:14 PM

So the concept of slowing a little to ride with less fit mates is out the window? Now it’s “I can use what I want to keep up with Sauser”.

 

Lekker, I’ll order some EPO, Clen and HGH so that I can keep up with the Cycle lab A batch ????

 

More seriously, eBikes do make cycling more social, but let’s not for a second pretend that is the reason somebody buys a Super Six with a built in 250w extra.

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 5:19 PM

So the concept of slowing a little to ride with less fit mates is out the window? Now it’s “I can use what I want to keep up with Sauser”.

 

Lekker, I’ll order some EPO, Clen and HGH so that I can keep up with the Cycle lab A batch ????

 

More seriously, eBikes do make cycling more social, but let’s not for a second pretend that is the reason somebody buys a Super Six with a built in 250w extra.

Haha no, not at all. The gap between us is just so big that it's not a little bit of slowing down. He has an FTP of 450W (EDIT: I overstated, it's 415W to be exact), me 250. He weighs 80kg, I weigh 105kg.

 

But that's not actually why I think it was so great today. He landed at 12, earliest start we could do was 1:30PM, he could only ride till about 4:30PM - so it was more about the fact that we could do all the nice trails in a very short time span.

 

For me an ebike will be a full on downhill rig that I can shuttle on. I don't see it ever replacing my normal bike - but it is nice for those times you only have a short time - before or after work and doing DH type runs is your flavour....

Patchelicious

Nov 13, 2019, 5:21 PM

Haha no, not at all. The gap between us is just so big that it's not a little bit of slowing down. He has an FTP of 450W, me 250. He weighs 80kg, I weigh 105kg.

 

But that's not actually why I think it was so great today. He landed at 12, earliest start we could do was 1:30PM, he could only ride till about 4:30PM - so it was more about the fact that we could do all the nice trails in a very short time span.

So the bakkie is not actually lifted, that’s just the suspension set with a little extra “pre-load” ????

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 5:22 PM

On the road ebikes - I don't see the appeal there. But that's just me.

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 5:23 PM

So the bakkie is not actually lifted, that’s just the suspension set with a little extra “pre-load” ????

Hahaha pretty much :)

Rob22

Nov 13, 2019, 5:31 PM

A friend came over from Hong Kong today for a wedding, and we decided to squeeze in a ride, I usually struggle to ride with him coz he is very fit (like very - won Berg and Bush mid week, W2W mid week, 3rd in 36One, and top 50 at the Epic). So I usually push myself int the red when I ride with him, which although nice is a bit of punishent. Anyway, he didn't bring a bike over so he had to hire one - and all that was available was an ebike from Ride Inn. I borrowed my old man's ebike for a day.

 

I just upped the assistance a bit more than he did and we could ride quite comfortably together today. We did Status Quo, Iron Monkey, Plumber, and Firehut - all top to bottom in just over 3 hours. Flipen impressive.

 

An ebike will never ever replace my normal enduro bike, but (one day) I will buy myself something like the new Spez Kenevo with a double crown fork - for a day like today an ebike was just the best tool for the job. Loved it.

I think it’s a bit like a golf handicap, a lower handicapper can still enjoy a game of golf with a pro. Without that you would have to be similar skilled to enjoy the game (ride)

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 5:35 PM

I think it’s a bit like a golf handicap, a lower handicapper can still enjoy a game of golf with a pro. Without that you would have to be similar skilled to enjoy the game (ride)

Pretty much yes. I'm sure the guy I was riding with was still holding back (alot) but it was nice to know I could at least keep up and still have a conversation.

 

But like I mentioned, biggest upside today was the amount of trails we got to ride in a very short period of time. That loop would usually take me 5 hours and I'd be stuffed.

 

Downside: the extra weight was not ideal on Status Quo, bike was alot to get around somw of those corners. And the crappy Guide brakes did not help at all - but that's got nothing to do with ebikes, those brakes are terrible on any bike.

Patchelicious

Nov 13, 2019, 5:42 PM

On the road ebikes - I don't see the appeal there. But that's just me.

That’s because you aren’t a cheat

 

 

#TrumpJrBook

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Nov 13, 2019, 5:52 PM

On the road ebikes - I don't see the appeal there. But that's just me.

Jeez dude, roadies are just SO much more efficient. Coming back from Tokai yesterday, Cuan and I hitting it reasonably hard on the tar section back to Trail and Tar, roadie comes whizzing past us just soft pedalling. We both just laughed. 

 

But ja. I see a niche for those. The not so fit guys wanting to do a euro tour, and cover more distance. For those steep cols that I know Duane has done, but a bit more and not being as trashed afterwards... 

 

I wouldn't ever buy a roadie e bike, but I'd buy a Kenevo (new gen) tomorrow. If I could. 

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 13, 2019, 6:05 PM

Jeez dude, roadies are just SO much more efficient. Coming back from Tokai yesterday, Cuan and I hitting it reasonably hard on the tar section back to Trail and Tar, roadie comes whizzing past us just soft pedalling. We both just laughed.

 

But ja. I see a niche for those. The not so fit guys wanting to do a euro tour, and cover more distance. For those steep cols that I know Duane has done, but a bit more and not being as trashed afterwards...

 

I wouldn't ever buy a roadie e bike, but I'd buy a Kenevo (new gen) tomorrow. If I could.

Yeah, blows my mind how much more efficient road bikes are. Even my 13kg steel gravel bike with 45c tyres feels like a breeze to pedal than a lighter XC hardtail!

 

But, as with all things there will always be a niche that wants what bike manufacturers come up with.

 

With you on the new gen Kenevo - if I had an extra 125k lying around that bike would be in my garage tomorrow.

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Nov 13, 2019, 6:19 PM

Yeah, blows my mind how much more efficient road bikes are. Even my 13kg steel gravel bike with 45c tyres feels like a breeze to pedal than a lighter XC hardtail!

 

But, as with all things there will always be a niche that wants what bike manufacturers come up with.

 

With you on the new gen Kenevo - if I had an extra 125k lying around that bike would be in my garage tomorrow.

One of the guys I ride with has it. MACHINE. Then you get Mark Hopkins' one that has a 49 on the front in place of the Boxxer. OMF it's gorgeous. 

Duane_Bosch

Nov 14, 2019, 5:58 AM

 

But ja. I see a niche for those. The not so fit guys wanting to do a euro tour, and cover more distance. For those steep cols that I know Duane has done, but a bit more and not being as trashed afterwards... 

 

I don't get E roadbikes.

 

I could never have my photo taken at the top of the Tourmalet holding an E Bike. Never. I could never disrespect all the people who have done it on their own stream like that. When the day comes that I can't ride up a big mountain then I'll look to the flatlands.

 

But there's still 4 teeth on the rear to go and 20 margarine bricks of ballast attached to my body that I could ditch. Plus there's this often overlooked method called training.With smart trainers, programs like training peaks and the huge amount of training info available there really are no excuses.

 

Hell. On Rouvy you can even "ride" the actual climb before you get there. I "rode" Sa Calobra the other night and from a difficulty point of view it was pretty much the same as the real thing.

Captain Fastbastard Mayhem

Nov 14, 2019, 7:45 AM

I don't get E roadbikes.

 

I could never have my photo taken at the top of the Tourmalet holding an E Bike. Never. I could never disrespect all the people who have done it on their own stream like that. When the day comes that I can't ride up a big mountain then I'll look to the flatlands.

 

But there's still 4 teeth on the rear to go and 20 margarine bricks of ballast attached to my body that I could ditch. Plus there's this often overlooked method called training.With smart trainers, programs like training peaks and the huge amount of training info available there really are no excuses.

 

Hell. On Rouvy you can even "ride" the actual climb before you get there. I "rode" Sa Calobra the other night and from a difficulty point of view it was pretty much the same as the real thing.

Yeah, and there's nothing wrong with that at all. I have the same opinion as you on the roadie ebike, for my personal use. Nee dankie. 

Jewbacca

Nov 14, 2019, 8:17 AM

Change the thread.... The mostly unanimous decision after 2000 posts is 'Yes, but not in races'.

 

New Thread topic.... 'Do road E-Bikes deserve to exist?'

Mamil

Nov 14, 2019, 8:18 AM

Grease Monkey with stats like that  I think we might both be right in the middle of the e-bike target market. Don't waver - be strong .... eat the cheese burger and keep pedaling,,,,

 

 

Haha no, not at all. The gap between us is just so big that it's not a little bit of slowing down. He has an FTP of 450W (EDIT: I overstated, it's 415W to be exact), me 250. He weighs 80kg, I weigh 105kg.

But that's not actually why I think it was so great today. He landed at 12, earliest start we could do was 1:30PM, he could only ride till about 4:30PM - so it was more about the fact that we could do all the nice trails in a very short time span.

For me an ebike will be a full on downhill rig that I can shuttle on. I don't see it ever replacing my normal bike - but it is nice for those times you only have a short time - before or after work and doing DH type runs is your flavour....

Mamil

Nov 14, 2019, 8:19 AM

An unequivocal and resounding NO!!

 

 

Change the thread.... The mostly unanimous decision after 2000 posts is 'Yes, but not in races'.

 

New Thread topic.... 'Do road E-Bikes deserve to exist?'

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 14, 2019, 8:21 AM

Grease Monkey with stats like that  I think we might both be right in the middle of the e-bike target market. Don't waver - be strong .... eat the cheese burger and keep pedaling,,,,

 

 

I am reading this chowing down on a brownie and coffee special from Merkava (coffee shop next to my work). Aint no chance of me not eating the cheese burger any time soon hahaha

Duane_Bosch

Nov 14, 2019, 8:30 AM

Grease Monkey with stats like that  I think we might both be right in the middle of the e-bike target market. Don't waver - be strong .... eat the cheese burger and keep pedaling,,,,

Bru FTP is the most lied about number on the planet. More even than d!ck size. 250 is enough to get up the hills.

Fat Boab

Nov 14, 2019, 8:34 AM

Now the lazy can hide their shame....

 

 

I liked one of the comments..."I assume that everyone who overtakes me is on an ebike. Hurts less that way."

Rigardt@Scott

Nov 14, 2019, 8:34 AM

Bru FTP is the most lied about number on the planet. More even than d!ck size. 250 is enough to get up the hills.

 

Yeah, it gets me up all the hills - I have no issues doing bottom to top climbs in Jonkers - it just takes me alot longer than the guy with 165W more, and 25kg less than me.

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