A couple of weeks ago a mate of mine was out with me on our guest bike. It was his first time riding an assisted bike. Towards the end of the ride I asked him how he was doing. He said he really didn't think the motor was doing much that he could feel. So I told him to just rotate the pedals without putting pressure on them, he slowed down a bit, I told him that's what the motor's doing. Then I told him to turn the power off but carry on pedalling, he slowed down a lot, 'That's what you're doing'.
I agree the brain is somehow arrogant enough to assume that speed and ease attained with assist is down to what it's telling the body to do. No assist, back to the leaden legs of a(insert age here) year old. Which is why we went electric in the first place.
I agree the brain is somehow arrogant enough to assume that speed and ease attained with assist is down to what it's telling the body to do. No assist, back to the leaden legs of a(insert age here) year old. Which is why we went electric in the first place.