• kirklennon
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    1 year ago

    We’re generally assuming that walking is impractically far for the trips in question. It’s quite obvious that you can bike faster and further on an e-bike without breaking a sweat than you can on a regular bike.

    • @FishFace@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      I brought up walking only because I don’t get sweaty walking - it doesn’t have to be practical to commute that way. If you can go for a 6 hour hike without getting sweaty, you can bike to work for substantially less than 6 hours without getting sweaty, right?

      • kirklennon
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        11 year ago

        If you can go for a 6 hour hike without getting sweaty

        No, I don’t think most people in most climates can, actually.

        you can bike to work for substantially less than 6 hours without getting sweaty, right?

        Do your sweat glands just not work like most people? You can probably bike very slowly on level ground without breaking a sweat. The faster you go and the warmer or more humid it is, the more likely you are to sweat. E-bikes move that threshold significantly. Every person is a little different, of course, but it moves the sweat threshold for everyone.

        • @FishFace@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          I live in a relatively cool climate but it gets to a high relatively humidity. I don’t think it has anything to do with my sweat glands - if it were then I would overheat easily because I wouldn’t be sweating enough, right? It’s bizarre to me that you think most people in most climates can’t walk indefinitely without sweating - walking shouldn’t be an exertion unless you’re climbing a steep hill or are seriously unfit. Sure, in a hot climate in summer, but there’s a lot of the world which is not that.

          I do cycle pretty slowly (about 10mph) so if your journey is onerous at that speed but doable at the speed limit of an e-bike than that would make a difference of course. Still, I think people get too fixated on cycling fast in some countries where cycling isn’t the norm because cycling is seen more as a sport than as transport.