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French Tourist Warned for Riding Electric Scooter on Koh Phangan Roads


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Posted
50 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

100% agree - there's no need to shoe-horn offence here by making stuff up... 

 

IMO - the police were correct to pull the guy over on the basis that the 'mode of transport' is unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured - thats all fair enough. 

Now, how many other motorcycles on the Island are also, unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured ???

 

This guy coloured outside the lines and that gets noticed here... 

 

:clap2: :cheesy:

Posted
1 hour ago, madone said:

What are you on about?

the dude WAS NOT ON THE BTS.

 

Nor was he sharing a confined space with others. he was on his own vehicle on a tropical island.

quit looking for reasons to be offended. 

quit looking for reasons to be offended. - I agree with you 100%

 

  • Agree 1
Posted
11 minutes ago, ravip said:
1 hour ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

100% agree - there's no need to shoe-horn offence here by making stuff up... 

 

IMO - the police were correct to pull the guy over on the basis that the 'mode of transport' is unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured - thats all fair enough. 

Now, how many other motorcycles on the Island are also, unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured ???

 

This guy coloured outside the lines and that gets noticed here... 

 

:clap2: :cheesy:

 

A bit 'nitpickey' those emoji's eh, ravip ????  :passifier:

Posted
6 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

“Electric scooters like this are prohibited on public roads due to safety concerns and their inability to be legally registered. If an accident occurs, there is no insurance coverage to rely on.”

...unless they are being ridden by Thai citizens, then never-mind, the warning does not apply.

  • Like 1
Posted
6 minutes ago, connda said:

...unless they are being ridden by Thai citizens, then never-mind, the warning does not apply.

 

I doubt very much that a 'Thai citizen' would even consider buying an electric unicycle.

Totally impractical and nowhere to hang the amulet.

Posted
1 hour ago, lordgrinz said:

Dude, just buy a motorcycle and drive it without a helmet or license like the locals.

Okay yourself a sidecar which is totally illegal but yet everybody has one

  • Agree 1
Posted

I have one of those electric unicycles. Closest thing to flying without leaving the ground. But what about all the other unregistered and unlicensed electric scooters, bikes, trikes, golf carts and mobility carts you see on the road. Are they ok?

  • Agree 1
Posted
2 minutes ago, Seeall said:
1 hour ago, lordgrinz said:

Dude, just buy a motorcycle and drive it without a helmet or license like the locals.

Okay yourself a sidecar which is totally illegal but yet everybody has one

 

To two tier enforcement is rather obvious in this situation, particularly given the degree of helmetless riding and vehicles without tax stickers etc...  so the betting is many (if not most) are also uninsured etc and quite likely most riders on the island unlicensed (but thats just an assumption).

 

Nevertheless, 1 wheeled device is just stupid, especially if being ridden recklessly - so the Police did the right thing. 

The point of course is their selectiveness when doing the right thing !!! 

 

---------

 

That said, it would be good, particularly in area's such as this to allow electric scooters - its time Thailand offered a way to tax and road legalise many of these - but they also come in such varied form standardised classifications become difficult...   But on small roads with (theoretically) slow traffic, this is not an issue.

 

Something like this [below] could be made road legal and offer plenty of convenience from a mobility perspective. 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YhjVjjV-kz0

 

 

That said - these scooters are still a lot less stable than a regular scooter - so perhaps maintaining a regular scooter as the 'minimum road legal form of transport' makes sense. 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Agree 1
Posted
5 minutes ago, Stevemercer said:

I have one of those electric unicycles. Closest thing to flying without leaving the ground. But what about all the other unregistered and unlicensed electric scooters, bikes, trikes, golf carts and mobility carts you see on the road. Are they ok?

 

No - theoretically, they are also illegal as they are not registered, taxed or insured - so if one is involved in an at fault accident with another vehicle there is little room for recourse. 

 

Then, as pointed out we have the food-carts, samlors etc... I very much doubt they are insured - but all Thai authorities turn that blind eye... 

 

This is also the argument against bicycles sharing the road with other vehicles which have to be registered, taxed and insured.

 

 

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted

I was terrified when I saw these Death Machines® in both NoCal & SoCal, both men and women whizzing by at very fast speeds 20-30mph (32-48 kmh), no helmets, padding or safety gear, even dangerous on hiking/biking paths, much less roads.

Dude!

One bump and you're a Meat Crayon on the pavement. 😀

  • Agree 1
Posted
4 hours ago, ravip said:

Shirtless in public places/roads & vehicles, is absolutely disgusting.

And by the way, it is against the law and punishable by a fine.

  • Agree 2
Posted
2 hours ago, Tropicalevo said:

There is no BTS on Koh Phangan.

Nor is there a city and that is where the French guy was.

He wasn't in Bangkok.

Relevance is important in this article.

Of course, of course. But once this is a habit...

YES! I have been next to a sweaty shirtless person on a sky train and my experience was NOT pleasant. By the way, it was not a Thai person either.

Posted
2 hours ago, lordgrinz said:

Dude, just buy a motorcycle and drive it without a helmet or license like the locals.

Or come to Australia where despite safety being the country's number one concern, electric scooters and one wheelers are a regular site on the roads. 

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