I'm not writing about what the law says. I'm writing about what you said, when you signed your iicense.
You said it. So do it.
I said no such thing about what i would do with my bicycle.
The actual point, as I understand it, is that you and I are a part of a society, whether we like it or not, and that society has rules, whether we like them or not, and that when we use the group's space and resources we are making an implied contract with everyone else to do so respectfully.
You won't get any disagreement from me on this, i advocate for being respectful to others on a bike at all times.
This is sensible until one's pride and joy gets confiscated and destroyed. I think your stealth approach has more merit, particularly if it's one's sole means of transportation.
I often wonder what will happen if some over-eager cop sees the thick hub of a Rohloff or other IGH and thinks it's a hub motor and won't take "you're wrong" for an answer.
See, i have never once been worried about this.
Here's my closest encounters since 2011:
- once i was testing out a very high power ebike that had no pedals at the time. At a stop light, a cop rolled down the window and made a joke about me being lance armstrong.
- once i was climbing a hill at 40mph in the bike lane while pedaling. cop took a pause but decided to not bother me.
There are also numerous high power gas and electric powered bikes in my area. I see and hear them on trails. 99.9% of people ride respectfully here.
We have just as restrictive as laws on the books as anyone else here, but no actual enforcement, except imagine that in the most extreme cases, maybe someone's been busted here downtown for something very unhinged.
It will never stop disappointing me how scary the idea of a social compact is to my fellow Americans. We can be the best people in the world until someone dares to suggest that maybe having such a standard of decency should in some limited cases be compulsory, and the result is always that a handful of fools get to ruin things for everyone else.
Sometimes the social compact is dead wrong, in addition to the law. Many times the social compact is a result of the law.
USA has a long history of having citizens decide they are not putting up with crooked laws, resisting, and then winning.
Over 70% of the people who live here have have some noble lawbreaker to thank for becoming a big enough of a pain in the ass, that the laws and the social compact end up getting reworked.
This cultural thread goes back to out founding fathers, plus the fact that
most of America's population is made up of people who got tired of being abused by their government or their society.
I'm saying that the law is unreasonable, unjust, and designed to force people to use cars for transportation by making the maximum ebike speed lower than the average road speed.
This is a consistent thread with the law; for example, in NYC, due to the density, you have very low road traffic speeds. A legal ebike could keep up with those speeds in the road. But recently they lowered the maximum ebike speed even more, essentially to force ebikes off the road.
In fact in NYC the govt does a number of things to screw even pedal bicyclists over in the same way. You get continually forced into situations where you could get fined and don't have a legal alternative. Casey Neistat has published a number of videos on this.
There are so many cases in the USA where the law as written is designed to prevent people from using efficient transport for anything other than sporting purposes. You'd think that the oil companies write them.
Here in Utah, the infrastructure for pedal bicycles is mostly non existent. You will continually be forced into a car lane, a dirt road, or the sidewalk while riding, and bike lanes appear and disappear with no rhyme or reason. The sidewalk part is illegal. The part where you are in a car lane creating a road hazard, strangely, is not.
That makes everyone who rides a pedal bike a sufficient distance a lawbreaker.
I have a fast ebike for these scenarios where i am forced into the road with no other option. This is for safety. In the bike lane, i typically ride legal ebike speeds or below.
I think these laws are unjust, oppressive, and very poorly thought out. If i don't have to follow them because they aren't enforced, i won't.
And there's nothing wrong with that. What's wrong is operating your vehicle in a reckless way, and harming others as a result.
..but we already have laws for that, so..