Yup, a twenty minute walk becomes a breezy 5 minute ‘scoot’, for about a Euro.There is a company called wind.co that does the same in Lanzarote. They're absolutely brilliant for nipping around town, exploring and reducing taxi usage.
It's something like 2 euro to unlock it and 20 cents per minute to use.
On roads.What is the "correct" way to ride a motorised scooter through a town, where permitted.
You take it on the pavement and compete with pedestrians? Or you travel with traffic on the main road, following traffic rules.
Exactly what Nitefly said. Boosted have just released a beast of a scooter, they're fantastic devices if used sensibly, just like many of the new personal electric vehicle and last mile devices hitting the market in recent years.
Thankfully this thread has evolved from being about someone completely irrelevant to one about electric scooters.This is completely irrelevant, well done on the crap post of the year.
Excellent. Now all we need is to update the Road Traffic Act to allow for their use by persons having passed the new Powered Scooter driving test and having the correct insurance.
Sounds good to me. Legistlation to enable the safe usage of scooters, ebikes, eboards etc. in cities should be the way forward.
24mph sounds too fast for using on a pavement and not fast enough for using on a main roadExactly what Nitefly said. Boosted have just released a beast of a scooter, they're fantastic devices if used sensibly, just like many of the new personal electric vehicle and last mile devices hitting the market in recent years.
What is the "correct" way to ride a motorised scooter through a town, where permitted.
You take it on the pavement and compete with pedestrians?
Given all of London is going to be 20mph soon and lots already is, 24mph is plenty24mph sounds too fast for using on a pavement and not fast enough for using on a main road
He has a point though, the OP deliberately phrased his post to imply she was not the one at fault in the accident. So it bares pointing out the truth.This is completely irrelevant, well done on the crap post of the year.
That legislation already exists, ebikes are legal wherever regular bicycles are, and electric scooter/skateboards are on roads (too slow/dangerous) and pavements (too fast/dangerous).Legistlation to enable the safe usage of scooters, ebikes, eboards etc. in cities should be the way forward.