I contend inexperienced riders can "reach dangerous speeds" on any bike going downhill so I simply don't respect the concern about an eMTB going fast. Same with the trail damage bs- Analog riders skid and drift regularly and nobody says a word. It's common to see advertisements featuring riders drifting the rear tire into a turn. The practice seems to almost be encouraged!The "anti-regulation" crowd is missing the point: it’s about trail access. If we ignore power and speed limits, there is no logical reason to ban dirt bikes from MTB trails. Throttles and high wattage allow inexperienced riders to reach dangerous speeds and damage trails through burnouts and drifting—activities they rarely spend time or money to repair.
While a strong rider can and does hit 20mph on a pedal bike & flat+smooth terrain, the average "weekend warrior" can't sustain that on knobby tires. I don't think you run Mezcals and Racekings on your eMTB, do you? Even with a 60Nm bike, you climb uphill at least 2x and often 3x as fast as you could under your own power.
Yet "we need more"...no, you frikkin don't. Would it be fun? Hell yes. But not on shared paths with other bikes and hikers and equestrians.
200mph in a car would be fun too, but ... not in public streets.
High-powered eMTBs create a massive speed delta that intimidates hikers and traditional cyclists. Manufacturers like DJI pushing the limits with "boost modes" and Specialized introducing Class II modes etc, only invites stricter classification. If we keep pushing the "inch" we were given into a mile, we’ll all end up classified as e-motos and banned from public land. If you want a Surron, buy one along with a trailer and ride it on your backyard, dirt bike tracks and jeep paths etc — insisting on de-restricting bikes - when 750W peak power is already 3x what the law allows for, risks ruining bicycle access for the rest of us.
Further, your 200mph car point actually reinforces my position that eMTB shouldn't be disallowed. Cars aren't disallowed on roadways because they can exceed some arbitrary speed. We outlaw behavior; not potential behavior.
At my home trail system (Hawes) at least 50% of the maintenance volunteers are on eMTB; probably because they can haul tools and equipment more easily up the mountain... and technically eMTB are not even allowed at Hawes. Canyon just did a demo event at Hawes and they had a bunch of eMTBs for demo.
I said it before and i'll say it again... A lot of the eMTB hate is a byproduct of analog riders getting their egos hurt by a less strong and experienced rider passing them uphill like they're standing still. They're not even going that fast but compared to the 4mph an analog is climbing at, the eMTB rider doing 12 mph is somehow a safety hazard. smh