hi Perbear,
Do you agree with me that the european rules are ridiculous ?, they make electric bikes almost pointless.
I want the start a petition to have the laws changed - are you interested?
Hi Philip,
I shared your view a while back, but after studying the rules and standards, I now understand the reasons for these limitations. First, all motorized vehicles used on public roads has regulations, the same with EPAC. And remember that within these limitation we can use our e-bike as a regular bike, with no extra insurance, protection, traffic regulations etc. That is a huge benefit.
Remember also that the EPAC is a cycle with motor
assistance. The motor is not to give you a speed on the flats higher than other cyclists. You normally only need the motor when going uphill, against heavy wind, or when you are tired. Then the 25km/h is an acceptable limit. Also, as I explain below, the limits can be tweaked, both speed and most important, the 250W limit. IMHO, the EN 15194 standard actually gives wider limits for EPAC speed and power than the 2002/24/EEC directive alone:
1) The EN 15194 standard accepts a 10% "production" deviation on speed limit:
"During a production conformity check, the maximum speed may differ by ± 10% from the above-mentioned determined value.". With accurate speed sensor (+/- 0.5 km/h), you may set the limit at 27 km/h and still be legal.
2) 250W limit is for continous motor
output. If your motor is bigger, say 300W but this is power INPUT, not output, and it's maximum efficiency is say 80%, this would be a legal motor for EPAC.
3) EN 15194 specifies motor power to be measured according to EN 60034-1 section 3.2.1 duty type S1 - continous duty cycle. (Actually, this chapter does not exist, so this is obviously a misprint for 4.2.1).
The chapter in EN 60034-1 about duty cycle S1 describes how to find the load (output power) the motor can handle continously this way:
"Operation at a constant load maintained for sufficient time to allow the machine to reach thermal equilibrium..".
That means the
250W limit is the power output the motor can supply continously without burning the motor windings.
Power output can actually be more than 250W for limited periods..
That means you may have a motor with 500W or 1kW peak output for hill climbing as long as your motor can not handle the higher peak power for more than a limitied time without overheating the windings. The peak power must be limited/controlled by temperature sensors or other means.
The maximum speed must of course not be exeeded even at peak power.As a last resort, you may use a more powerful/faster e-bike than EPAC in Europe, but it is much harder to make it yourself since it must be approved/MOT and have insurance.
Per