Use w3m for archiving
This commit is contained in:
@@ -1,406 +1,403 @@
|
||||
#[1]Craig Mod — Writer + Photographer
|
||||
|
||||
[2]About Craig
|
||||
[3]Books & [4]Essays
|
||||
[5]Membership
|
||||
[6]Shop!
|
||||
[7]“Special Projects” Membership
|
||||
Podcasts:🎧 [8]On Margins & [9]SW945
|
||||
[10]Newsletters:📩 [11]Roden & [12]Ridgeline
|
||||
|
||||
Header image for Electric Bike, Stupid Love of My Life
|
||||
|
||||
[1]
|
||||
[2]About Craig
|
||||
[3]Books & [4]Essays
|
||||
[5]Membership
|
||||
[6]Shop!
|
||||
[7]“Special Projects” Membership
|
||||
Podcasts:🎧 [8]On Margins & [9]SW945
|
||||
[10]Newsletters:📩 [11]Roden & [12]Ridgeline
|
||||
[13]
|
||||
[14]
|
||||
[15]
|
||||
Header image for Electric Bike, Stupid Love of My Life
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Electric Bike, Stupid Love of My Life
|
||||
|
||||
Reflections on eighteen months of electric bike ownership
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
My electric bike sings, emits a nearly imperceptible hum from its tiny
|
||||
motor. I love its song. A song of peace and magic. Has money ever
|
||||
bought as much delight as the delight of an electric bike?
|
||||
My electric bike sings, emits a nearly imperceptible hum from its tiny motor. I
|
||||
love its song. A song of peace and magic. Has money ever bought as much delight
|
||||
as the delight of an electric bike?
|
||||
|
||||
The first time I rode one was nearly a decade ago, in Kyoto. The
|
||||
electric bike I rented was huge and unwieldy, but that tug of its motor
|
||||
never left my mind. I went to climb a hill and it felt as if a giant
|
||||
had gently placed his hand on my back and pushed me forward. That
|
||||
stupid smile has been on my face ever since.
|
||||
The first time I rode one was nearly a decade ago, in Kyoto. The electric bike
|
||||
I rented was huge and unwieldy, but that tug of its motor never left my mind. I
|
||||
went to climb a hill and it felt as if a giant had gently placed his hand on my
|
||||
back and pushed me forward. That stupid smile has been on my face ever since.
|
||||
|
||||
Two years ago I rented another one. This one smaller, lighter, the
|
||||
motor more powerful. I was convinced. This is the way. Eighteen months
|
||||
ago, in the heart of the pandemic, I committed and bought my first
|
||||
electric bike and have never looked back.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
Two years ago I rented another one. This one smaller, lighter, the motor more
|
||||
powerful. I was convinced. This is the way. Eighteen months ago, in the heart
|
||||
of the pandemic, I committed and bought my first electric bike and have never
|
||||
looked back.
|
||||
|
||||
Indulge me — a summer afternoon: Soaring down the coast, the ocean to
|
||||
one side and a strand of old pines to the other. The afternoon sun
|
||||
beats down but it feels cool and there’s something irrationally
|
||||
stirring — downright emotional — about the efficiency of this dumb
|
||||
machine beneath my body. The motor looks too small — just a black
|
||||
cylinder on the hub of the wheel. And yet it moves. It sings that song.
|
||||
A subtle hum. A beautiful hum. It makes me want to ride and ride,
|
||||
ridiculous distances, nonsensical distances. I don’t want to get to
|
||||
where I’m going because I want the ride to last longer. I want to
|
||||
linger in this space as long as possible, this space of smooth and
|
||||
efficient movement through the world, gliding in near total mechanical
|
||||
silence, just the sound of rubber on the pavement, wind in my ears,
|
||||
breaking waves, salt, the smell of pine. This is what electric bikes
|
||||
do: They drive you insane with the poetry of the world.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
A strange trio A few of my old bikes: A mamachari, carbon fiber road
|
||||
bike, and Kalavinka
|
||||
Indulge me — a summer afternoon: Soaring down the coast, the ocean to one side
|
||||
and a strand of old pines to the other. The afternoon sun beats down but it
|
||||
feels cool and there’s something irrationally stirring — downright emotional —
|
||||
about the efficiency of this dumb machine beneath my body. The motor looks too
|
||||
small — just a black cylinder on the hub of the wheel. And yet it moves. It
|
||||
sings that song. A subtle hum. A beautiful hum. It makes me want to ride and
|
||||
ride, ridiculous distances, nonsensical distances. I don’t want to get to where
|
||||
I’m going because I want the ride to last longer. I want to linger in this
|
||||
space as long as possible, this space of smooth and efficient movement through
|
||||
the world, gliding in near total mechanical silence, just the sound of rubber
|
||||
on the pavement, wind in my ears, breaking waves, salt, the smell of pine. This
|
||||
is what electric bikes do: They drive you insane with the poetry of the world.
|
||||
|
||||
[13]#So Many Bikes
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
A strange trio A few of my old bikes: A mamachari, carbon fiber road bike, and
|
||||
Kalavinka
|
||||
|
||||
All my standing life, I’ve biked. As a kid I rode a K-Mart Huffy to a
|
||||
rusted nub and then managed to nab a Haro Group 1. As an adult, bikes
|
||||
have been one of my few material indulgences (unwittingly,
|
||||
organically). In the past twenty years alone I’ve owned some fifteen
|
||||
bikes. I’ve had aluminum and carbon Bianchi road bikes. I’ve had steel
|
||||
Kalavinka keirin bikes with gorgeous head badges. I’ve had folding
|
||||
Dahon and Birdy BD-1s. I’ve had a handful of beloved brandless
|
||||
throwaway mamacharis — shopping bikes — that have proven hearty and fun
|
||||
in their own ways, and have each died uniquely. I’ve gone out of my way
|
||||
to get a handmade Arrow cruiser from a builder in Ogikubo. I still have
|
||||
a custom orange Moulton that I’ve modified into a single-speed city
|
||||
bomber that goes remarkably fast while floating atop its simple
|
||||
suspension.
|
||||
[16]#So Many Bikes
|
||||
|
||||
And on and on — bikes. Why? Because as any bike lover will tell you, to
|
||||
be ensorcelled by the bike is to crave one and only one thing: More
|
||||
bike. Each new bike is like riding once again for the first time.
|
||||
Exploring a city on a mamachari is different than a BD-1 is different
|
||||
than a Moulton. All thrilling. The bikes change, and so, too does your
|
||||
relationship to the pavement. My love for bikes has no categorical
|
||||
allegiances; if it has two wheels, and pedals, I’m interested. I want
|
||||
to ride them all.
|
||||
A Moulton Tiny, but fast, nearly flawless as a city machine — a Moulton
|
||||
with converted stem, Sugino cranks, coaster brake
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
All my standing life, I’ve biked. As a kid I rode a K-Mart Huffy to a rusted
|
||||
nub and then managed to nab a Haro Group 1. As an adult, bikes have been one of
|
||||
my few material indulgences (unwittingly, organically). In the past twenty
|
||||
years alone I’ve owned some fifteen bikes. I’ve had aluminum and carbon Bianchi
|
||||
road bikes. I’ve had steel Kalavinka keirin bikes with gorgeous head badges.
|
||||
I’ve had folding Dahon and Birdy BD-1s. I’ve had a handful of beloved brandless
|
||||
throwaway mamacharis — shopping bikes — that have proven hearty and fun in
|
||||
their own ways, and have each died uniquely. I’ve gone out of my way to get a
|
||||
handmade Arrow cruiser from a builder in Ogikubo. I still have a custom orange
|
||||
Moulton that I’ve modified into a single-speed city bomber that goes remarkably
|
||||
fast while floating atop its simple suspension.
|
||||
|
||||
Summers in most of Japan have never been easy. The temperatures England
|
||||
flirted with in 2022 are temperatures Tokyoites have contended with for
|
||||
centuries (and now contend with ones even higher). Crushing heat
|
||||
coupled with suffocating humidity. A three-shower-a-day kinda summer.
|
||||
Watch an Ozu film and observe the languid and supine impulse of its
|
||||
inhabitants during summertime scenes — that’s not affect, it’s
|
||||
survival. In Japan’s August, you simply can’t walk a block without
|
||||
losing most of your moisture.
|
||||
And on and on — bikes. Why? Because as any bike lover will tell you, to be
|
||||
ensorcelled by the bike is to crave one and only one thing: More bike. Each new
|
||||
bike is like riding once again for the first time. Exploring a city on a
|
||||
mamachari is different than a BD-1 is different than a Moulton. All thrilling.
|
||||
The bikes change, and so, too does your relationship to the pavement. My love
|
||||
for bikes has no categorical allegiances; if it has two wheels, and pedals, I’m
|
||||
interested. I want to ride them all.
|
||||
|
||||
Bikes have always helped. A bicycle generates a microclimate with
|
||||
minimal effort. Standing on a street corner you may be soaked, but on a
|
||||
bike, the wind whooshing past, you are crisp(er) and dry(er). An
|
||||
electric bike only amplifies the effect.
|
||||
A Moulton Tiny, but fast, nearly flawless as a city machine — a Moulton with
|
||||
converted stem, Sugino cranks, coaster brake
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
When I was a child I dreamt of having a personal helicopter. Powered by
|
||||
my feet and a bit of magic (certainly not gasoline, oddly, thinking
|
||||
back on it now). I imagined quietly gliding over the city in this tiny
|
||||
contraption, floating from home to video rental shop to diner, stopping
|
||||
by a friend’s house along the way. An electric bike gets me most of the
|
||||
way to this feeling.
|
||||
Summers in most of Japan have never been easy. The temperatures England flirted
|
||||
with in 2022 are temperatures Tokyoites have contended with for centuries (and
|
||||
now contend with ones even higher). Crushing heat coupled with suffocating
|
||||
humidity. A three-shower-a-day kinda summer. Watch an Ozu film and observe the
|
||||
languid and supine impulse of its inhabitants during summertime scenes — that’s
|
||||
not affect, it’s survival. In Japan’s August, you simply can’t walk a block
|
||||
without losing most of your moisture.
|
||||
|
||||
In the past eighteen months I’ve put several thousand kilometers on my
|
||||
electric bikes. It feels like cheating in every best possible way. I
|
||||
live in a seaside town south of Tokyo and traffic can get ridiculous,
|
||||
its ancient roads sized for horses, not cars. The electric bike swoops
|
||||
between and alongside these stale processions of heat and burning fuel.
|
||||
Drifting behind a gas-powered scooter or moped feels like observing
|
||||
some Victorian contraption — inefficient and loud and clunky and
|
||||
burdensome and pollutant. And not much faster (often much slower) or
|
||||
more useful than an electric bike.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
Bikes have always helped. A bicycle generates a microclimate with minimal
|
||||
effort. Standing on a street corner you may be soaked, but on a bike, the wind
|
||||
whooshing past, you are crisp(er) and dry(er). An electric bike only amplifies
|
||||
the effect.
|
||||
|
||||
A Vanmoof and a BESV My friend's S3 and my BESV (the X3 looks like a
|
||||
slightly smaller version of the S3)
|
||||
When I was a child I dreamt of having a personal helicopter. Powered by my feet
|
||||
and a bit of magic (certainly not gasoline, oddly, thinking back on it now). I
|
||||
imagined quietly gliding over the city in this tiny contraption, floating from
|
||||
home to video rental shop to diner, stopping by a friend’s house along the way.
|
||||
An electric bike gets me most of the way to this feeling.
|
||||
|
||||
[14]#Electrics
|
||||
In the past eighteen months I’ve put several thousand kilometers on my electric
|
||||
bikes. It feels like cheating in every best possible way. I live in a seaside
|
||||
town south of Tokyo and traffic can get ridiculous, its ancient roads sized for
|
||||
horses, not cars. The electric bike swoops between and alongside these stale
|
||||
processions of heat and burning fuel. Drifting behind a gas-powered scooter or
|
||||
moped feels like observing some Victorian contraption — inefficient and loud
|
||||
and clunky and burdensome and pollutant. And not much faster (often much
|
||||
slower) or more useful than an electric bike.
|
||||
|
||||
I own two electric bikes. My first purchase was the strangely named
|
||||
BESV PSA1 — which is a smaller wheeled (20"), rear-wheel drive machine,
|
||||
with mostly off-the-shelf components allowing you to customize it to
|
||||
your liking. ^[15]1 And then, because I was so enamored by the BESV —
|
||||
so seduced by its small motor of umph, so wanting more and different
|
||||
electric bike experiences — I went and picked up a front-wheel drive
|
||||
Vanmoof X3 — the smaller-wheeled brother (24") to Vanmoof’s (quite
|
||||
frankly) giant S3 — just a few months later.
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
A Vanmoof and a BESV My friend's S3 and my BESV (the X3 looks like a slightly
|
||||
smaller version of the S3)
|
||||
|
||||
I love them both like damaged brothers, because both of these bikes are
|
||||
flawed in frustrating ways.
|
||||
[17]#Electrics
|
||||
|
||||
The electronic brain on the BESV is as dumb as they come.^[16]2 The
|
||||
settings reset each time you turn the bike on. The acceleration curves
|
||||
feel unrefined — herky-jerky, you might say. Its app is the worst app I
|
||||
have on my phone — badly designed, nearly functionally useless, clearly
|
||||
engineered without love. And yet. Despite these flaws I put hundreds of
|
||||
kilometers on this thing in the first month. The front and rear
|
||||
suspension turn every road to glass, and are even fine for dirt trails;
|
||||
I find myself hunting down paths through parks I’d never otherwise
|
||||
think about. Suddenly every hilly road is a thing demanding to be
|
||||
explored. Up up up the little machine yells, and you follow its
|
||||
command.
|
||||
I own two electric bikes. My first purchase was the strangely named BESV PSA1 —
|
||||
which is a smaller wheeled (20"), rear-wheel drive machine, with mostly
|
||||
off-the-shelf components allowing you to customize it to your liking. ^[18]1
|
||||
And then, because I was so enamored by the BESV — so seduced by its small motor
|
||||
of umph, so wanting more and different electric bike experiences — I went and
|
||||
picked up a front-wheel drive Vanmoof X3 — the smaller-wheeled brother (24") to
|
||||
Vanmoof’s (quite frankly) giant S3 — just a few months later.
|
||||
|
||||
Guests who stay at my studio are given the BESV to ride. We take it
|
||||
down the coast. It never fails to amaze. One friend felt compelled to
|
||||
pet it upon dismount, saying, Good job, buddy, so quick and deep was
|
||||
the affection for the thing.
|
||||
I love them both like damaged brothers, because both of these bikes are flawed
|
||||
in frustrating ways.
|
||||
|
||||
The Vanmoof is much smarter — the brain and software within it are
|
||||
refined, the app good, the acceleration curves smooth — but the bike is
|
||||
all custom components, and they aren’t the highest quality at that. The
|
||||
automatic shifting mechanism on mine failed twice in the first two
|
||||
months, requiring shipping the bike to the Vanmoof store.^[17]3 The
|
||||
seat post bolt broke off in the post. The original plastic pedals felt
|
||||
cheap and flimsy (pedals are one of the few things you can swap for
|
||||
your own). The aluminum frame is too stiff for the speed the bike
|
||||
generates — it can feel like you’ve been rattled to death after a bumpy
|
||||
road. (And stiffness mitigation by lowering tire pressure seems to only
|
||||
increase possibility of puncture.) But, more than all that, the design
|
||||
of the bike has a dangerous fundamental flaw: The bottom bracket is
|
||||
simply too low.
|
||||
The electronic brain on the BESV is as dumb as they come.^[19]2 The settings
|
||||
reset each time you turn the bike on. The acceleration curves feel unrefined —
|
||||
herky-jerky, you might say. Its app is the worst app I have on my phone — badly
|
||||
designed, nearly functionally useless, clearly engineered without love. And
|
||||
yet. Despite these flaws I put hundreds of kilometers on this thing in the
|
||||
first month. The front and rear suspension turn every road to glass, and are
|
||||
even fine for dirt trails; I find myself hunting down paths through parks I’d
|
||||
never otherwise think about. Suddenly every hilly road is a thing demanding to
|
||||
be explored. Up up up the little machine yells, and you follow its command.
|
||||
|
||||
Of all my many, many bikes, I’ve never had a pedal bottom out. On this
|
||||
Vanmoof X3? Dozens of times. Most critically during a turn at speed —
|
||||
the pedal hit the pavement, jumped the bike sideways, and sent me
|
||||
flying. It’s the only bad crash I’ve had in decades. So I’ve had to
|
||||
modify the way I ride — no pedaling into or out of turns, hyper
|
||||
awareness of deviations in lateral road slope — because, despite all
|
||||
this, I can’t stop riding this stupid thing. It sings — that hum. It is
|
||||
joy. I reach for it daily and it takes me around the peninsula and
|
||||
makes me happy to be alive.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
Guests who stay at my studio are given the BESV to ride. We take it down the
|
||||
coast. It never fails to amaze. One friend felt compelled to pet it upon
|
||||
dismount, saying, Good job, buddy, so quick and deep was the affection for the
|
||||
thing.
|
||||
|
||||
BESV @ Lee's Bread, Oiso I've written about three electric bike rides
|
||||
for Papersky Magazine: Misaki, Oiso, and Yokosuka.
|
||||
The Vanmoof is much smarter — the brain and software within it are refined, the
|
||||
app good, the acceleration curves smooth — but the bike is all custom
|
||||
components, and they aren’t the highest quality at that. The automatic shifting
|
||||
mechanism on mine failed twice in the first two months, requiring shipping the
|
||||
bike to the Vanmoof store.^[20]3 The seat post bolt broke off in the post. The
|
||||
original plastic pedals felt cheap and flimsy (pedals are one of the few things
|
||||
you can swap for your own). The aluminum frame is too stiff for the speed the
|
||||
bike generates — it can feel like you’ve been rattled to death after a bumpy
|
||||
road. (And stiffness mitigation by lowering tire pressure seems to only
|
||||
increase possibility of puncture.) But, more than all that, the design of the
|
||||
bike has a dangerous fundamental flaw: The bottom bracket is simply too low.
|
||||
|
||||
Allow me to share a dirty secret: More often than not, at midnight I
|
||||
can’t repress the impulse — I have to take a bike out. Out the bike
|
||||
comes and together we head into the empty streets of my town and hum
|
||||
our way all over, visiting temples in total silence. There are no cars.
|
||||
Often no people. It feels illicit — this slipping around town, this
|
||||
sliding into temple parking lots in the shroud of the night, looking at
|
||||
their old beams, feeling ten years old and grateful for both the
|
||||
ability and awareness to be doing just this very thing at this very
|
||||
moment.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
Of all my many, many bikes, I’ve never had a pedal bottom out. On this Vanmoof
|
||||
X3? Dozens of times. Most critically during a turn at speed — the pedal hit the
|
||||
pavement, jumped the bike sideways, and sent me flying. It’s the only bad crash
|
||||
I’ve had in decades. So I’ve had to modify the way I ride — no pedaling into or
|
||||
out of turns, hyper awareness of deviations in lateral road slope — because,
|
||||
despite all this, I can’t stop riding this stupid thing. It sings — that hum.
|
||||
It is joy. I reach for it daily and it takes me around the peninsula and makes
|
||||
me happy to be alive.
|
||||
|
||||
I’ve long since posited world peace could be achieved if you bought
|
||||
everyone in the world a bike, but now I want those bikes to be
|
||||
electric. I want everyone to feel this silliness, this punch-drunk
|
||||
stupidity of pure love, this sense of cheating the rules, the norms,
|
||||
this sense of ever-present delight. At our worst, humans mindlessly
|
||||
consume, sear the earth and each other, fill our bodies with poisons.
|
||||
At our best we invent electric bikes. Batteries have gotten more
|
||||
efficient, motors smaller and more powerful. The last decade has
|
||||
brought great efficiency to these machines, and the next ten years will
|
||||
only double down on these gains. Electric bike numbers are up, year
|
||||
over year over year. Tremendously so. Those who know, proselytize. We
|
||||
can’t help it. The charm is too great. The game non- zero sum. The more
|
||||
people who know, the better the world. It’s a wild notion, this sense
|
||||
of goodness to be had if you just reach out for it. Goodness with no
|
||||
real downside. Like solar panels or wind turbines, electric bikes are
|
||||
machines that buoy the spirit and the earth.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
BESV @ Lee's Bread, Oiso I've written about three electric bike rides for
|
||||
Papersky Magazine: Misaki, Oiso, and Yokosuka.
|
||||
|
||||
Buy the best electric bike you can within your budget. Stretch if
|
||||
possible. Usually, the more you spend the lighter the machine, the more
|
||||
powerful the motor, the longer-lasting the battery. Depending on which
|
||||
country you live in top speeds will differ. In Japan the bike’s are
|
||||
capped at 24km/h. In America, 32km/h. Some places only allow for
|
||||
pedal-assist — meaning the motor only works when pedaling. Others allow
|
||||
throttles, blurring the line between bike and scooter. Laws will change
|
||||
in the coming years as more people adopt the machines and cities
|
||||
themselves adapt. This is just the start. Ten years ago it was fairly
|
||||
rare to see an electric bike around Tokyo. Today, it seems as if every
|
||||
parent hauling their kids is doing so electrically.
|
||||
Allow me to share a dirty secret: More often than not, at midnight I can’t
|
||||
repress the impulse — I have to take a bike out. Out the bike comes and
|
||||
together we head into the empty streets of my town and hum our way all over,
|
||||
visiting temples in total silence. There are no cars. Often no people. It feels
|
||||
illicit — this slipping around town, this sliding into temple parking lots in
|
||||
the shroud of the night, looking at their old beams, feeling ten years old and
|
||||
grateful for both the ability and awareness to be doing just this very thing at
|
||||
this very moment.
|
||||
|
||||
A good strategy: Find a local bike shop that will let you try out
|
||||
several electric bikes. Some have front-hub motors, others rear-hub
|
||||
motors. Others, the motor sits in the center, between the cranks. Each
|
||||
has a subtly different feel. Going up a hill, a front-motor’d machine
|
||||
may skip or slip as you pull back on the handlebars, but on flat land
|
||||
will feel more like being tugged through the world.
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Sure, electric bikes aren’t cheap. But I believe they’re a rare object
|
||||
to be well worth the cost. This in spite of their annoying flaws, their
|
||||
often bad software, their defective geometries. Because they open the
|
||||
world. Whatever world may have been nearby, an electric bike brings it
|
||||
nearer. This is worth more than you might estimate. These bikes sing
|
||||
their little songs and the smile on your face makes you look like a
|
||||
village idiot, but what a wonderful idiot to be.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
I’ve long since posited world peace could be achieved if you bought everyone in
|
||||
the world a bike, but now I want those bikes to be electric. I want everyone to
|
||||
feel this silliness, this punch-drunk stupidity of pure love, this sense of
|
||||
cheating the rules, the norms, this sense of ever-present delight. At our
|
||||
worst, humans mindlessly consume, sear the earth and each other, fill our
|
||||
bodies with poisons. At our best we invent electric bikes. Batteries have
|
||||
gotten more efficient, motors smaller and more powerful. The last decade has
|
||||
brought great efficiency to these machines, and the next ten years will only
|
||||
double down on these gains. Electric bike numbers are up, year over year over
|
||||
year. Tremendously so. Those who know, proselytize. We can’t help it. The charm
|
||||
is too great. The game non- zero sum. The more people who know, the better the
|
||||
world. It’s a wild notion, this sense of goodness to be had if you just reach
|
||||
out for it. Goodness with no real downside. Like solar panels or wind turbines,
|
||||
electric bikes are machines that buoy the spirit and the earth.
|
||||
|
||||
A summer night: Biking home alongside a river. The air is thick with
|
||||
humidity and cicadas vibrate wildly in the distance. The moon is out.
|
||||
My choices: straight home along the shimmering moonlit river, or take a
|
||||
detour, up into the dark mountains, doubling the distance. To my
|
||||
surprise, I choose the mountains almost every time. More! That tiny
|
||||
child who fantasized about helicopters yells. More of this, whatever
|
||||
this is. More more more. And so I feed that impulse, an impulse
|
||||
generated and nurtured by the electric bike. Into the shadow mountains
|
||||
we go, up, pushed by the hand of that giant, always present, always
|
||||
ready to help. It is a ridiculous thing. A thing of peace and magic. An
|
||||
owl hoots. The smile has never left my face.
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
[18]#Noted:
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________
|
||||
Buy the best electric bike you can within your budget. Stretch if possible.
|
||||
Usually, the more you spend the lighter the machine, the more powerful the
|
||||
motor, the longer-lasting the battery. Depending on which country you live in
|
||||
top speeds will differ. In Japan the bike’s are capped at 24km/h. In America,
|
||||
32km/h. Some places only allow for pedal-assist — meaning the motor only works
|
||||
when pedaling. Others allow throttles, blurring the line between bike and
|
||||
scooter. Laws will change in the coming years as more people adopt the machines
|
||||
and cities themselves adapt. This is just the start. Ten years ago it was
|
||||
fairly rare to see an electric bike around Tokyo. Today, it seems as if every
|
||||
parent hauling their kids is doing so electrically.
|
||||
|
||||
1. I upgraded my BESV to an SRAM drivetrain and Paul brake levers and
|
||||
Klamper disc calipers, some MKS pedals, and a set of Brooks grips
|
||||
and saddle and it feels wonderful through and through. These Paul
|
||||
Klampers are mechanical. The Vanmoof uses (generic?) hydraulic
|
||||
brakes. After thousands of kilometers, my conclusion is: hydraulics
|
||||
feel nice, but they are fussy (and perhaps Vanmoof’s chosen
|
||||
components are sub-optimal) and difficult (?) to tune on your own.
|
||||
In the end, I just don’t think they’re worth it. Too “delicate.”
|
||||
The Pauls feel as fresh today as the day I put them on, whereas the
|
||||
hydraulics have required much bikeshop tuning over the course of
|
||||
the last eighteen months. Were the Vanmoof more flexible, I’d
|
||||
happily swap out for mechanicals. This lack of flexibility is a
|
||||
bummer because, unlike an Apple iPhone, for example, where the
|
||||
components tend to be best of class (think: modem, CPU, camera
|
||||
unit, etc), the physical components on a Vanmoof most definitely
|
||||
aren’t — nor do they offer the option to pay more to get better
|
||||
components. [19]↩︎
|
||||
2. Oh, how I wish this thing was open source, hackable — because it’s
|
||||
so close to great. Sadly — and I don’t know how else to frame this
|
||||
— it feels like the engineers behind the software don’t ride bikes.
|
||||
At least not this one. The software flaws are so fundamentally
|
||||
obvious, that anyone who had a) access to the code, and b) rode the
|
||||
bike, couldn’t NOT fix these obvious issues. What I really wish,
|
||||
though, is that I could slap the Vanmoof brain onto the BESV body
|
||||
and, well, then we’d be in Electric Bike Elysium. [20]↩︎
|
||||
3. I’ve since learned — the drive train of the Vanmoof is not to be
|
||||
“ridden” like a “bike” but rather, “feathered” like a delicate sand
|
||||
castle — assume the gears could explode at any moment and apply the
|
||||
least amount of pressure you can; the motor is strong enough to
|
||||
take care of most of the rest. In this way, the Vanmoof feels more
|
||||
like a moped that uses “pedal assist” as a suggestion than a pure
|
||||
electric-assist bike — a smart way to get around motorcycle laws in
|
||||
most countries, which I assume is the main point. Not to say you
|
||||
don’t get a workout on the Vanmoof, you do, but not nearly as much
|
||||
as the more classically committed BESV — which really does require
|
||||
you to pedal.
|
||||
Maybe this is a good place to bring up the question: Why not just
|
||||
get an electric scooter? I think it mainly comes down to
|
||||
flexibility and philosophy. With a pedal assist bike (even if the
|
||||
pedaling required is minimal) you simply have more flexibility in
|
||||
parking, in riding, in “lightness” of transportation, than with an
|
||||
electric scooter. Also: Insurance costs, maintenance, and higher
|
||||
base cost. And philosophically, being able to still use the bike as
|
||||
a “bike” without power feels like an aspect of these machines we
|
||||
shouldn’t be so quick to toss aside. [21]↩︎
|
||||
A good strategy: Find a local bike shop that will let you try out several
|
||||
electric bikes. Some have front-hub motors, others rear-hub motors. Others, the
|
||||
motor sits in the center, between the cranks. Each has a subtly different feel.
|
||||
Going up a hill, a front-motor’d machine may skip or slip as you pull back on
|
||||
the handlebars, but on flat land will feel more like being tugged through the
|
||||
world.
|
||||
|
||||
This essay, published September 2022. Thoughts? Email
|
||||
[22]me@craigmod.com.
|
||||
[23]Craig Mod, his head, floating at the bottom of the article
|
||||
Sure, electric bikes aren’t cheap. But I believe they’re a rare object to be
|
||||
well worth the cost. This in spite of their annoying flaws, their often bad
|
||||
software, their defective geometries. Because they open the world. Whatever
|
||||
world may have been nearby, an electric bike brings it nearer. This is worth
|
||||
more than you might estimate. These bikes sing their little songs and the smile
|
||||
on your face makes you look like a village idiot, but what a wonderful idiot to
|
||||
be.
|
||||
|
||||
[24]Craig Mod is a writer and photographer based in Japan. He's the
|
||||
author of the books [25]Things Become Other Things and [26]Kissa by
|
||||
Kissa and is a MacDowell, Ragdale, and VCCA writing fellow. His essays
|
||||
and articles have appeared in The New York Times, Eater, The Atlantic,
|
||||
California Sunday Magazine, Wired, Aeon, New Scientist, Virginia
|
||||
Quarterly Review, The New Yorker, The Morning News, Codex: Journal of
|
||||
Typography, and elsewhere.
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
He writes newsletters, oh yes, [27]newsletters: [28]Roden &
|
||||
[29]Ridgeline.
|
||||
A summer night: Biking home alongside a river. The air is thick with humidity
|
||||
and cicadas vibrate wildly in the distance. The moon is out. My choices:
|
||||
straight home along the shimmering moonlit river, or take a detour, up into the
|
||||
dark mountains, doubling the distance. To my surprise, I choose the mountains
|
||||
almost every time. More! That tiny child who fantasized about helicopters
|
||||
yells. More of this, whatever this is. More more more. And so I feed that
|
||||
impulse, an impulse generated and nurtured by the electric bike. Into the
|
||||
shadow mountains we go, up, pushed by the hand of that giant, always present,
|
||||
always ready to help. It is a ridiculous thing. A thing of peace and magic. An
|
||||
owl hoots. The smile has never left my face.
|
||||
|
||||
The work on this site is supported in part by [30]paid memberships.
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Whatever you do, don't follow @craigmod on [31]Threads or
|
||||
[32]Instagram.
|
||||
[21]#Noted:
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
1. I upgraded my BESV to an SRAM drivetrain and Paul brake levers and Klamper
|
||||
disc calipers, some MKS pedals, and a set of Brooks grips and saddle and it
|
||||
feels wonderful through and through. These Paul Klampers are mechanical.
|
||||
The Vanmoof uses (generic?) hydraulic brakes. After thousands of
|
||||
kilometers, my conclusion is: hydraulics feel nice, but they are fussy (and
|
||||
perhaps Vanmoof’s chosen components are sub-optimal) and difficult (?) to
|
||||
tune on your own. In the end, I just don’t think they’re worth it. Too
|
||||
“delicate.” The Pauls feel as fresh today as the day I put them on, whereas
|
||||
the hydraulics have required much bikeshop tuning over the course of the
|
||||
last eighteen months. Were the Vanmoof more flexible, I’d happily swap out
|
||||
for mechanicals. This lack of flexibility is a bummer because, unlike an
|
||||
Apple iPhone, for example, where the components tend to be best of class
|
||||
(think: modem, CPU, camera unit, etc), the physical components on a Vanmoof
|
||||
most definitely aren’t — nor do they offer the option to pay more to get
|
||||
better components. [22]↩︎
|
||||
|
||||
2. Oh, how I wish this thing was open source, hackable — because it’s so close
|
||||
to great. Sadly — and I don’t know how else to frame this — it feels like
|
||||
the engineers behind the software don’t ride bikes. At least not this one.
|
||||
The software flaws are so fundamentally obvious, that anyone who had a)
|
||||
access to the code, and b) rode the bike, couldn’t NOT fix these obvious
|
||||
issues. What I really wish, though, is that I could slap the Vanmoof brain
|
||||
onto the BESV body and, well, then we’d be in Electric Bike Elysium. [23]↩︎
|
||||
|
||||
3. I’ve since learned — the drive train of the Vanmoof is not to be “ridden”
|
||||
like a “bike” but rather, “feathered” like a delicate sand castle — assume
|
||||
the gears could explode at any moment and apply the least amount of
|
||||
pressure you can; the motor is strong enough to take care of most of the
|
||||
rest. In this way, the Vanmoof feels more like a moped that uses “pedal
|
||||
assist” as a suggestion than a pure electric-assist bike — a smart way to
|
||||
get around motorcycle laws in most countries, which I assume is the main
|
||||
point. Not to say you don’t get a workout on the Vanmoof, you do, but not
|
||||
nearly as much as the more classically committed BESV — which really does
|
||||
require you to pedal.
|
||||
|
||||
Maybe this is a good place to bring up the question: Why not just get an
|
||||
electric scooter? I think it mainly comes down to flexibility and
|
||||
philosophy. With a pedal assist bike (even if the pedaling required is
|
||||
minimal) you simply have more flexibility in parking, in riding, in
|
||||
“lightness” of transportation, than with an electric scooter. Also:
|
||||
Insurance costs, maintenance, and higher base cost. And philosophically,
|
||||
being able to still use the bike as a “bike” without power feels like an
|
||||
aspect of these machines we shouldn’t be so quick to toss aside. [24]↩︎
|
||||
|
||||
[25] [26]
|
||||
|
||||
This essay, published September 2022. Thoughts? Email [27]me@craigmod.com.
|
||||
|
||||
[28]Craig Mod, his head, floating at the bottom of the article
|
||||
|
||||
[29]Craig Mod is a writer and photographer based in Japan. He's the author of
|
||||
the books [30]Things Become Other Things and [31]Kissa by Kissa and is a
|
||||
MacDowell, Ragdale, and VCCA writing fellow. His essays and articles have
|
||||
appeared in The New York Times, Eater, The Atlantic, California Sunday Magazine
|
||||
, Wired, Aeon, New Scientist, Virginia Quarterly Review, The New Yorker, The
|
||||
Morning News, Codex: Journal of Typography, and elsewhere.
|
||||
|
||||
He writes newsletters, oh yes, [32]newsletters: [33]Roden & [34]Ridgeline.
|
||||
|
||||
The work on this site is supported in part by [35]paid memberships.
|
||||
|
||||
Whatever you do, don't follow @craigmod on [36]Threads or [37]Instagram.
|
||||
|
||||
Subscribe to my newsletters
|
||||
|
||||
Join some ~30,000 other subscribers.
|
||||
[33]Roden: photography × literature × tech × film (monthly)
|
||||
[34]Ridgeline: walking × Japan (weekly)
|
||||
Always one-click to unsubscribe.
|
||||
____________________
|
||||
[X] Roden (monthly)
|
||||
[X] Ridgeline (weekly)
|
||||
(BUTTON) Subscribe
|
||||
Join some ~30,000 other subscribers.
|
||||
|
||||
[38]Roden: photography × literature × tech × film (monthly)
|
||||
[39]Ridgeline: walking × Japan (weekly)
|
||||
|
||||
Always one-click to unsubscribe.
|
||||
|
||||
[40][ ]
|
||||
[41][*] Roden (monthly)
|
||||
[42][*] Ridgeline (weekly)
|
||||
Subscribe
|
||||
Popular Essays
|
||||
|
||||
[44]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
An endless, gritty, very spitty walk
|
||||
The Buzz Cut
|
||||
|
||||
Good walks benefit from context.
|
||||
You'd think a buzz would be a buzz would be a buzz
|
||||
|
||||
[45]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Walking Around Kan Yasuda's Sculptures
|
||||
|
||||
Exploring Arte Piazza in Hokkaido
|
||||
|
||||
[46]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Pop-Up Walk
|
||||
|
||||
What does a pop-up walk look like?
|
||||
|
||||
[47]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Stab a Book, the Book Won't Die
|
||||
|
||||
On the resilience of books in the face of apps, attention monsters, and an
|
||||
ad-driven online economy
|
||||
|
||||
[48][ ]
|
||||
|
||||
Produced / written / maintained by [49]Craig Mod since 2002
|
||||
|
||||
[50] [51] [52] [53]
|
||||
|
||||
[piwik]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
How I Got My Attention Back
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
Technology is commanding our attention in infinite, insurmountable loops. A
|
||||
country trip off-grid helped me escape.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Annapurna Moonrise
|
||||
|
||||
A night on Annapurna basecamp
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The Leica Q
|
||||
|
||||
A six month field test — by Craig Mod
|
||||
|
||||
____________________
|
||||
|
||||
Produced / written / maintained by [35]Craig Mod since 2002
|
||||
|
||||
References
|
||||
|
||||
Visible links:
|
||||
1. https://craigmod.com/index.xml
|
||||
2. https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
3. https://craigmod.com/books/
|
||||
4. https://craigmod.com/essays/
|
||||
5. https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
6. https://shop.specialprojects.jp/
|
||||
7. https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
8. https://craigmod.com/onmargins/
|
||||
9. https://sw945.craigmod.com/
|
||||
10. https://craigmod.com/newsletters/
|
||||
11. https://craigmod.com/roden/
|
||||
12. https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
13. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#so-many-bikes
|
||||
14. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#electrics
|
||||
15. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:1
|
||||
16. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:2
|
||||
17. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:3
|
||||
18. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#noted
|
||||
19. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:1
|
||||
20. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:2
|
||||
21. https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:3
|
||||
22. mailto:me@craigmod.com
|
||||
23. https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
24. https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
25. https://shop.specialprojects.jp/products/things-become-other-things-1st-ed/
|
||||
26. https://shop.specialprojects.jp/products/kissa-by-kissa-4th-ed
|
||||
27. https://craigmod.com/newsletters
|
||||
28. https://craigmod.com/explorers/
|
||||
29. https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
30. https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
31. http://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
32. http://instagram.com/craigmod
|
||||
33. https://craigmod.com/roden/
|
||||
34. https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
35. https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
|
||||
Hidden links:
|
||||
37. https://craigmod.com/
|
||||
38. https://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
39. https://instagram.com/craigmod/
|
||||
40. https://mastodon.social/@craigmod
|
||||
41. mailto:?subject=From%20craigmod.com:%20Electric%20Bike%2c%20Stupid%20Love%20of%20My%20Life&body=I%20think%20you%20might%20enjoy%20this%20article:%0D%0Ahttps%3a%2f%2fcraigmod.com%2fessays%2felectric_bikes%2f%20%0D%0A
|
||||
42. https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Electric%20Bike,%20Stupid%20Love%20of%20My%20Life+https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/
|
||||
43. https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/001/
|
||||
44. https://craigmod.com/essays/how_i_got_my_attention_back/
|
||||
45. https://craigmod.com/journal/annapurna_moonrise/
|
||||
46. https://craigmod.com/essays/leica_q/
|
||||
47. https://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
48. https://instagram.com/craigmod/
|
||||
49. https://mastodon.social/@craigmod
|
||||
50. https://craigmod.com/index.xml
|
||||
[1] https://craigmod.com/
|
||||
[2] https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
[3] https://craigmod.com/books/
|
||||
[4] https://craigmod.com/essays/
|
||||
[5] https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
[6] https://shop.specialprojects.jp/
|
||||
[7] https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
[8] https://craigmod.com/onmargins/
|
||||
[9] https://sw945.craigmod.com/
|
||||
[10] https://craigmod.com/newsletters/
|
||||
[11] https://craigmod.com/roden/
|
||||
[12] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
[13] https://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
[14] https://instagram.com/craigmod/
|
||||
[15] https://mastodon.social/@craigmod
|
||||
[16] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#so-many-bikes
|
||||
[17] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#electrics
|
||||
[18] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:1
|
||||
[19] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:2
|
||||
[20] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fn:3
|
||||
[21] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#noted
|
||||
[22] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:1
|
||||
[23] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:2
|
||||
[24] https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/#fnref:3
|
||||
[25] mailto:?subject=From%20craigmod.com:%20Electric%20Bike%2c%20Stupid%20Love%20of%20My%20Life&body=I%20think%20you%20might%20enjoy%20this%20article:%0D%0Ahttps%3a%2f%2fcraigmod.com%2fessays%2felectric_bikes%2f%20%0D%0A
|
||||
[26] https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Electric%20Bike,%20Stupid%20Love%20of%20My%20Life+https://craigmod.com/essays/electric_bikes/
|
||||
[27] mailto:me@craigmod.com
|
||||
[28] https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
[29] https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
[30] https://shop.specialprojects.jp/products/things-become-other-things-1st-ed/
|
||||
[31] https://shop.specialprojects.jp/products/kissa-by-kissa-4th-ed
|
||||
[32] https://craigmod.com/newsletters
|
||||
[33] https://craigmod.com/explorers/
|
||||
[34] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
[35] https://craigmod.com/membership/
|
||||
[36] http://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
[37] http://instagram.com/craigmod
|
||||
[38] https://craigmod.com/roden/
|
||||
[39] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/
|
||||
[44] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/106/
|
||||
[45] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/159/
|
||||
[46] https://craigmod.com/ridgeline/047/
|
||||
[47] https://craigmod.com/essays/media_accounting/
|
||||
[49] https://craigmod.com/about/
|
||||
[50] https://threads.net/@craigmod/
|
||||
[51] https://instagram.com/craigmod/
|
||||
[52] https://mastodon.social/@craigmod
|
||||
[53] https://craigmod.com/index.xml
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user