electric bike – Michmutters
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Mercedes Formula E Team e-bike review

Mercedes has jumped into the electric bike scene with its recent releases of multiple luxury e-bikes. And with the popularity of personal electric vehicles, ie electric scooters, bikes and Segways, the luxurious new product could be the route for those who are seeking to ditch petrol with style.

Interestingly, when it comes to e-bikes and especially e-scooters, I see a lot of people assuming that it’s a lazy mode of transport. And originally, in my mind, buying an e-bike just seemed like a stepped-down, less impressive, motorbike.

However, e-bikes aren’t that comparable to a motorbike and they’re not as lazy as you might think. In fact, with all Australian e-bikes you’re required to pedal while accelerating. And so it turns out an e-bike is more like a regular bike, with some exercise still involved, but you get that extra bit of oomph to take you further and up the hills you’d usually avoid.

With the Mercedes Formula E Team e-bike, in collaboration with N+ Bikes, it seems the up-market car company hopes to bring the luxury of its brand to the e-bike experience. Mercedes says it offers “style and quality with European engineering”. And at first glance I was certainly impressed with the silhouette of the bike.

It has an alluring, slim profile, even though the battery is completely hidden inside the frame, unlike other e-bikes which have an obvious chonk strapped to the side or squeezed under the seat.

It’s only when you look at the chain-ring and the bike’s cassette (ie. the pedally bits) that you notice some extra thickness, which visually gives away that this isn’t a regular bike.

In fact there’s a fully integrated drive train (the chain part of the bike) and being a carbon belt drive, it offers constant variable transmission, which is pretty fancy for a bike. This means that in comparison to a regular bike chain there aren’t any clunky gear changes, especially as you pump the acceleration.

Additionally, the bike has puncture resistant tires and hydraulic brakes, so you’re getting some fairly premium features here.

The bike is made of Aluminum 6061, weighs in at 20kg, and looks sleek in its single matt black colourway. Its top speed is 25km and its range is 70km on a charge. It takes three-and-a-half hours to charge up to 100 per cent. You’ll see a lot of this info on the LCD display while you’re riding, as it’s integrated into the center of the handlebars and is also pin-code protected (on start-up) for security.

Although still a little heavy, the bike itself is surprisingly manoeuvrable while riding and definitely has the smooth gear change as expected, along with a decent kick speed when required.

It oozes quality manufacturing, however, the one accessory it’s surprisingly missing are headlights and tail lights, and coming from a car brand I feel like this is a funny oversight.

But that’s a simple fix and I’ve seen other user reviews mentioning that “although it was strange they didn’t include lights”, the bike still exceeded their expectations.

Although I can admire the design, this e-bike has definitely been created with blokes in mind who have some cash to splash. The seat is classically tiny, hard and skinny which you see on bikes marketed to men. So as it stands, with my preference of a wider, cushioned seat, I can’t see myself taking it out on super long rides.

I suppose it’s race-car style though, which goes along with the theme, and it was an awesome bike to try out nonetheless. Aside from that, my test model was a little tall for my short stature. However, there are three different frame sizes which allow people from around 5ft 4” all the way up to 6ft 6” to ride. Though apparently this bike is specifically “optimized for riders over 165cm” (5ft 4”).

At the end of the day e-bikes are great at getting people of any fitness level out and about and you’ll find yourself becoming a little more adventurous, riding new places that maybe you would’ve avoided before. And because you can’t just accelerate mindlessly, you still burn some calories even if you’re cruising along.

A Mercedes e-bike will set you back double the cost of a regular e-bike at $4928. But if you want the best in class and have the cash then the Mercedes bike is certainly worth a look.

Elly Awesome is an Aussie tech and lifestyle vlogger | @ellyawesometech | Youtube

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Advocates say two-wheeled EVs a cheaper, greener option to de-carbonise transport

In the push to decarbonise Australia’s economy, much has been made of the need to transition to electric cars.

But advocates say there is a much cheaper and greener EV to consider — the electric bike.

While you will likely have to go on a 12-month waiting list and come up with at least $40,000 to buy a new electric car in Australia at the moment, you could get a two-wheeled vehicle with a battery that costs less than 10 cents to charge, remove easily.

Chris Jones, president of the Australian Electric Vehicle Association, says many of us have forgotten that bikes are a form of transport, and often see them as simply for fitness and recreation.

Dr Chris Jones, President, Australian Electric Vehicle Association
Chris Jones says EVs on two wheels seem forgotten by policy makers.(ABC Radio Perth: Emma Wynne)

“It’s a bit sad that this humble, very efficient, highly affordable electric vehicle is often overlooked,” Dr Jones said.

“I think a lot of people, especially in Perth, have always viewed bicycles as toys or recreation; they’re very rarely viewed as transport.”

But that is rapidly changing.

“[E-bikes] are the most abundant EV on the market right now. E-bikes are outselling electric cars 10 to one,” he said.

They range from about $1,200 to convert an existing bike to an electric motor and from $2,000 to $3,000 for a factory-built e-bike, and the running costs are “negligible”.

“The battery on my e-bike is about half a kilowatt hour. Based on Synergy [WA’s energy retailer] rates, that’s anywhere between 3.5 and 7 cents to fully charge the battery,” Dr Jones said.

‘You’re halfway there before you know it’

In the Perth hills, we met Andy, who had ridden his bike into the Kalamunda town center to do some shopping.

He bought his e-bike second-hand six months ago after his license was suspended and said it had been a practical replacement for the car, and one he planned to keep using even when he got back behind the wheel.

“It’s more fun riding to the shops and getting around than getting in the car and driving in traffic,” he said.

“And I haven’t had to worry about fuel, so that’s been good, especially with the price of fuel now. You get the pick of the parking spots.”

Andy in Kalamunda with e-bike
Andy got his e-bike six months ago, and says it is more convenient for short trips than driving.(ABC Radio Perth: Emma Wynne)

He has used push-bikes and motorbikes before, but the thing that surprised him most about the e-bike was just how easy it was to get around.

“It’s easier than walking out to the car and jumping in and all that turning it on and getting on the road,” he said.

“You’re halfway here before you know it.”

But it has highlighted for him the gaps in cycling infrastructure in his neighbourhood.

“The paths could be better, that’s for sure. I wouldn’t have picked up on that before.”

Removing barriers to riding

While there is nothing that an e-bike can do differently to a pedal-powered one, the powered motor removes barriers to cycling for trips where people would otherwise use their cars.

Road with bike sign going uphill
An electric motor takes away a lot of the difficulty in riding up hills.(ABC Radio Perth: Emma Wynne)

It is also attractive to people who want to ride but don’t have the fitness or desire to work up a sweat, but want to keep riding, according to Henry Shiel, who works at Fremantle e-bike shop Solarbike.

“We see people who, for example, want to commute a relatively short distance, but don’t feel that they want to work up too much of a sweat,” Mr Sheil said.

“The electric bike is like having a little helping hand pushing you along, you still make some effort, but you don’t work up the same sweat otherwise.

“In addition to that, quite a few parents drop their kids off to school with the bikes.

“We also have people who are older, or people who have lost perhaps a sense of balance, maybe after a little medical episode.”

Henry Shiel repairs an e-bike wheel
.Henry Shiel repairs an e-bike wheel. (ABC Radio Perth: Emma Wynne)

He said the shop recently sold an electric tricycle to a young man with a disability.

“He can go out with his family and keep up with them, and his father has told me that it has really been a huge benefit to the young man in terms of his independence.

“And there’s definitely a portion of people who have decided to eliminate the car, for the cost and the environmental impact.”

Two cyclists on a shared path at Claisebrook train station, above the Graham Farmer freeway in East Perth
Planners says encouraging people to ride rather than drive will be crucial.(ABC: Emma Wynne)

While most e-bikers choose to pedal while assisted by the motor, they do often come across the attitude that having a motor to assist is somehow cheating or failing to give them the full exercise benefit from cycling.

“I absolutely reject that,” Mr Sheil said.

“I found that [having the motor] meant that I used the bike on days that I otherwise might have gone: ‘Oh, it’s too windy, it’s too rainy, it’s too hot’ and taken the bus, or driven or something else.

“Whereas with the e-bike, I found that I actually use the bike a lot more, and therefore my aerobic fitness, felt the benefit of that.”

Reducing car use crucial to emission reduction

Removing that temptation to just jump in the car is vital if Australia is to achieve a net zero emission target, according to Courtney Babb, senior lecturer in urban and regional planning at Perth’s Curtin University.

“As part of the move towards net zero, we need to move people out of cars and to reduce car use,” Dr Babb said.

“There’s a focus on electric vehicles as doing that, and reducing our emissions that way, but that’s not going to be enough, we actually have to reduce car use.”

He says there is good evidence that e-bikes did that.

“Research shows e-bikes replace 20-80 per cent of trips in different cities around the world, with the cycling-friendly cities having the higher rates,” he said.

An aerial photo of a suburban street
A bicycle boulevard in a “safe active street” in Perth’s northern suburbs.(ABC News: Gian De Poloni)

He noted since the start of the COVID pandemic, there had been a growth in sales of both bikes and e-bikes, but there were still barriers, and one of the key ones was cycling infrastructure.

“One of the main drivers for people to cycle is having safe cycling environments,” Dr Babb said.

“We have a very good primary cycling network [in Perth]although it could also be better.

“But what’s missing is a lot of the secondary links… cycling on local streets and roads in general is considered unsafe.

“The United Nations recommends that about 20 per cent of transport budgets are dedicated to active transport, and I think about 2 per cent of ours is.”

Extending EV subsidies to mooted bikes

A number of Australian states and territories now offer subsidies and rebates to buy electric cars.

Dr Babb suggested governments could look at extending that financial support to e-bikes as well.

“I think if the government was serious about de-carbonising transportation, but also addressing some of the issues associated with a very car-focused, car-dependent transport system, we need to think about solutions other than just electric cars and providing subsidies for people for e-bikes might be one way of doing that,” he said.

“Even with a subsidy or a rebate for an electric vehicle, they’re focused on people who are on the wealthier end of the spectrum.

“With e-bikes, you can maybe address people who don’t have that much money to spend on an electric car and also substitute a lot of those trips within that 15-kilometre catchment where they live.”

A bike lane.
There are calls to extend subsidies and rebates to e-bikes.(ABC News: Gian De Poloni)

Chris Jones agrees.

“I think the fact that really efficient two-wheeled electric transport has been completely overlooked by the various schemes that are in existence is quite disappointing,” he said.

“I think governments often forget just how cheap e-bikes are as a transport option.”

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