I'm exactly the same. I could do 45km/h on my ebike but my power setting keeps it down to 32km/h on the flat. I feel quite safe on the road. I have been passed by fit cyclists so it is not as if it is a crazy speed. I find 32km/h a good speed on suburban roads.The Fixer wrote: ↑Sat Aug 07, 2021 5:23 pmI am almost 64, and have been riding bicycles since the age of four. I have also ridden motorcycles since before I was old enough for a licence. I currently drive a car (and sometimes the odd small truck), and ride both my 'normal' retro road-bicycles and an e-bike, and am considering regaining my motorcycle licence after a lapse of several years.
Yes, I have adjusted the settings on my e-bike (it's a 'legal' 250w e-MTB, not a 'frankenbike' with a huge motor, dodgy frame and no brakes) to do a maximum of 30-35km/h - BUT I very seldom actually USE that extra speed. I do NOT use it on cycle paths or mixed cycle/walking paths at any time. My machine has 5 power settings, and for most general riding I use position 3. I use 2 and sometimes even 1 on shared paths (depending on how busy they are), and 4 on hills. HOWEVER - if I am in reasonably heavy or fast-moving traffic, I use position 5, which gives me access to that extra few km/h. This reduces the speed difference between me and the surrounding traffic and improves my safety.
I know exactly what I'm doing, am not an 'old bloke without the skills or reflexes to handle it' and am certainly not a young smartarse to whom speed is everything. My e-bike is well-equipped to handle the extra 5-10km/h without issues - the brakes, lighting, tyres etc are more than adequate for the task, as I am more than qualified/experienced enough to judge. I made an informed decision as an experienced cyclist and motorcyclist to tweak the speed as a safety measure, and am perfectly happy and comfortable with my decision and see no reason why I shouldn't be.
If others disagree, or don't like it for whatever reason (and no doubt some will), I'd venture to suggest that it's their problem, not mine, and I certainly won't appreciate being abused or denigrated for my decision (again, as no doubt some will).
People seem to have this impression that if you do something illegal you lose all legal rights. I'm not sure where you studied law but when I studied law, you were responsible if your negligence caused the accident. Just having an illegally powered ebike doesn't mean you were negligent or caused an accident.
I find it laughable that I am criticised for doing 32km/h when there are electric scooters that can do double that speed.