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Do you believe this?
"Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! An electric bike is completely emission free can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." -- World Carfree Network http://www.worldcarfree.net/ Help for your car-addicted friends in the U.K. |
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#2
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On 9 Sep, 07:07, Doug wrote:
Do you believe this? "Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! An electric bike is completely emission free can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." -- World Carfree Networkhttp://www.worldcarfree.net/ Help for your car-addicted friends in the U.K. Why on earth would I want to exchange my comfortable car habit to get soaking wet and freezing cold on a bike, electric or not? If I want two wheels (ie sun shining, no possibility of rain, reasonably warm) then I use the scooter locally or the motor bike for longer trips. Cycles are for those who enjoy the sport/exercise or for the impoverished to get to and from work. |
#3
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"NM" wrote
Why on earth would I want to exchange my comfortable car habit to get soaking wet and freezing cold on a bike, electric or not? What, are you made of sugar? A bit of rain and cold isn't going to kill you, avoidance of all activities that might entail a bit of discomfort will probably knock years off your life. I don't get this idea of forever striving for the path of least effort. The most fun things in life, those that make life worth living, those that you will remember and talk about down the pub in years to come, involve getting sweaty and overcoming adversity. |
#4
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NM wrote:
Cycles are for those who enjoy the sport/exercise or for the impoverished to get to and from work. Data point. I enjoy being in the open air, in silence. I do not want the whine of an electric motor, or the louder blurting of an exhaust. I think that makes me a counter-example to your claim. BugBear |
#5
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Doug wrote:
Do you believe this? "Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! An electric bike is completely emission free can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." Nah, total marketing ********. What was the carbon footprint for the concrete base for big wind turbines? (not to mention the trucks, the cable, the electronics, the plastics etc.) Questions from next year's exams: How many ordinary people can afford a leccy bike that has a range of more than 15 miles? If Davey 'Eton' Cameron gets a leccy bike (to be nicked five minutes later) to be powered by his ikkle useless roof-top turbine? How many weeks will it take to charge the battery? How ****ing smug would he look? How many 'greens' would crawl up his arse? -- Come to Dave & Boris - your cycle security experts. |
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On 9 Sep, 06:07, Doug wrote:
Do you believe this? "Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! In and around a densely built-up city centre a bike can be faster than a car up to about 3 to 5 miles, depending on the city that you talk about and the time of the day. Problem is that more and more people live in suburbia or even further out in (what they believe is) the countryside and... increasingly work in some business park or industrial estate in suburbia. For these periphery-to-periphery commutes it's very difficult to beat the car. An electric bike is completely emission free Nothing is emission free - and a bicycle supported by an electric motor certainly has a higher environmental footprint than a simple steel-framed commuter bike. can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." I would agree that the environmental footprint of for example a Pedelec is massively lower than that of a car - even an eco-posh Prius. The good thing about Pedelecs (bicycles supported up to 25 km/h by a small electric motor) is that their energy consumption is really very low. The electric motor has a power of up to 250 Watt, which is much less than a car. I tried one last week - and it's really a great innovation, though I'll personally stick to my purely muscle driven bicycle. Andreas |
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On 9 Sep, 08:28, Keitht KeithT wrote:
How many ordinary people can afford a leccy bike that has a range of more than 15 miles? You can get bikes like the Giant Twist from about £1000, not a lot compared to what you spend on a cheapy car. This offers you a range of up to 60 miles in flat terrain. If Davey 'Eton' Cameron gets a leccy bike (to be nicked five minutes later) to be powered by his ikkle useless roof-top turbine? How many weeks will it take to charge the battery? roof-top turbines are rather inefficient, better in bulk in the form of wind parks. Andreas |
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On Wed, 9 Sep 2009 00:31:52 -0700 (PDT), NM
wrote: Cycles are for those who enjoy the sport/exercise or for the impoverished to get to and from work. So why do you keep posting to a cycling newsgroup then? |
#9
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On 9 Sep, 06:07, Doug wrote:
Do you believe this? "Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! An electric bike is completely emission free can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." -- World Carfree Networkhttp://www.worldcarfree.net/ Help for your car-addicted friends in the U.K. Still incapable of seeing the larger picture then Doug... |
#10
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![]() "Doug" wrote in message ... Do you believe this? "Using an electric bike is the best way there is to break the car habit. The average car journey in Britain is 5 to 8 miles and every day people in Britain make millions of small journeys to work or the shops and back that could easily be non-polluting bike rides - during rush-hour, a bike is twice as fast as a car - great if you hate jams! An electric bike is completely emission free can be made genuinely sustainable by purchasing electricity from a ‘green’ supplier, or generating it via a roof-mounted windmill or solar panel. This will enable the vehicles’ fossil fuel consumption to be zero." +++++++++++++ Electric bikes are a good thing in the right circumstances - here in Felixstowe a lot of (relatively) elderly people use them for trips of a mile or so into the shops and back. Also some not so elderly but not very fit looking. These people are generally not up to raw pedal power, and the electric bike provides them with a quick and easy way to get around without using a car. So fundamentally a good thing. The throw away lines about roof mounted windmill (very rarely mechanically effective in urban areas) and roof mounted solar panels (very rarely cost effective) is just pseudo-environmentalist ********. Most electric bikes do need some pedalling so there is a health benefit as well. Commuting by electric bike, preferably using dedicated roads, would reduce the traffic load on many towns and the general level of pollution. London is, as ever, a special case with often much longer commutes. Even restricting travel on some routes to cycles, motor cycles, and those dinky three wheeled motor scooters would allow more effective use of the available roads and ease congestion. This does not, of course, help local residents who need a car for things other than commuting. None of this is rocket science or new - there are plenty of options but no real will to do anything but support the car as the main form of transport. This could be, of course, because the majority of voters are car owners and users. Nothing major is going to happen until there is investment in infrastructure to allow easy travel by 'alternative' transport means. Designating pavements as 'dual use' may meet govenment tick list targets but does nothing to help commuting cyclists. Ho hum. Dave R |
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