Bird

Articles, guides, and products tagged "Bird" — a combined view of every catalogue resource on this topic.

User guide

Smooth acceleration and throttle control on an e-scooter: longitudinal weight-transfer physics, jerk-limited ramp, controller soft-start, slippery-surface launch, wheelie risk on a high-CoG deck, and throttle calibration

Acceleration is the longitudinal mirror of braking: the same weight-transfer, but with the sign flipped. Under a hard throttle opening, the motor torque at the rear wheel generates an equal reactive torque on the frame, which pitches the scooter nose-up; the rider's body inertia simultaneously moves rearward. The front wheel unloads — in the limit, it lifts off (wheelie); in the typical case, it loses lateral grip on a corner or a small bump. On an e-scooter, the throttle is not a 'gas pedal' in the traditional sense: between your finger and the stator winding sit a Hall sensor (0.84–4.2 V), a controller with PWM modulation and its own soft-start ramp, the BMS, and finally the motor with MOSFET switches. Each layer adds its own latency (5–50 ms), its own noise floor, and its own limit: an over-driven MOSFET → 150 °C cutoff, a displaced throttle magnet → ghost-throttle in the cold, an overly aggressive ramp in sport mode → a wheelie on a 30 % gradient. Jerk — the second derivative of velocity, m/s³ — has a medical comfort threshold for car passengers of ≈ 0.3–0.9 m/s³ ([ScienceDirect — Standards for passenger comfort in automated vehicles, 2022](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003687022002046)), but on a high-CoG, short-wheelbase e-scooter, even 1.5 m/s³ means a sharp deck pitch and finger-strain on the throttle. CPSC counts 50 000 ED visits in 2022 alone, 94 % of which were solo-falls with no other vehicle involved ([CPSC — E-Scooter and E-Bike Injuries Soar, 2024](https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News-Releases/2024/E-Scooter-and-E-Bike-Injuries-Soar-2022-Injuries-Increased-Nearly-21)); among typical mechanisms — stuck throttle (Apollo recall 2025) and uncontrolled acceleration on a slippery surface. This is a drill-oriented guide: physics, weight redistribution, jerk-limited ramp, soft-start vs sport mode, slippery launch, wheelie risk, ghost-throttle troubleshooting, a daily launch protocol with a 2–3 mph kick-start, and a 30-min weekly drill in an empty lot. ENG-first sources: MSF Basic RiderCourse, Wikipedia (Jerk physics, Wheelie, Weight transfer, Bicycle-and-motorcycle dynamics), Inside Motorcycles / Data for Motorcycles on the friction circle, Lime / Bird operator manuals, NAVEE on TCS, Apollo, GOTRAX, Levy Electric throttle guides, marsantsx on controller thermals, CPSC injury data.

13 min read

User guide

Electric scooter regulatory map: PLEV classification, 22 jurisdictions, safety certification (EN 17128 / UL 2272 / UL 2849 / EN 15194), EMC + radio (ECE R10 / FCC Part 15B / CISPR 12/25) — complete reference as of May 2026

Regulatory reference in three dimensions: (1) classification frameworks — EU PLEV (Personal Light Electric Vehicle) per EN 17128:2020 with max 25 km/h / 250 W continuous nominal / not subject to motor-vehicle type approval, versus US «no federal class» (CPSC 16 CFR Part 1500 consumer-product oversight without preemption), UK «PLEV trial-only» (legal only via approved rental schemes through 31 May 2026 per DfT), Canada provincial pilots (Ontario MTO Pilot Project per O. Reg. 389/19), Australia state-by-state (NSW «road use» trial + VIC trial + QLD legal since 2018); (2) detailed rules across 22 jurisdictions — Germany eKFV (BMVI / Bundesrat 2019, Versicherungsplakette mandatory, ≥14 years, 0.5 ‰ alcohol limit), France EDPM (Loi d'orientation des mobilités Loi 2019-1428, ≥12-14 years depending on municipality, 25 km/h), Spain DGT (Real Decreto 970/2020, max 25 km/h, helmet required under 18), Italy (Legge 160/2019 + Decreto 2022), Netherlands (RDW model-approval required, more restrictive), Sweden (Lag 2001:559 — allowed on bike paths since 2018), US 5 states (CA CVC 21229, NY NYS VTL § 1280-a + NYC Local Law 39/2023 with UL 2272/2849 mandate, FL HB 453, TX Transportation Code 551.401, WA RCW 46.04.336), Canada 3 provinces (ON Pilot 389/19, BC Pilot OIC 2020, QC trial since 2024), Australia 3 states (NSW shared trial Order 2023, VIC Trial regulations 2022, QLD Transport Operations 2018), Japan 特定小型原動機付自転車 special small mobility vehicle (Road Traffic Act amendment July 2023), Singapore Active Mobility Act 2017 with UL 2272 mandate June 2019, Ukraine Law №2956-IX «On Road Traffic» (ПЛЕТ, ≥16 years, 25 km/h); (3) safety + EMC certification — UL 2272:2019 vehicle-level electrical (NYC mandate per Local Law 39/2023, Singapore LTA mandate), UL 2849:2020 e-bike specific, EN 17128:2020 EU PLEV harmonized standard, EN 15194:2017+A1:2023 EPAC e-bike, IEC 62133-2:2017 battery cell safety mandatory globally, IEC 62619 industrial battery, ECE Regulation 10 Rev 6 (2017) automotive EMC, FCC Part 15 Subpart B § 15.101-15.107 unintentional radiators, CISPR 12:2018 vehicle EMI, CISPR 25:2021 vehicle in-band radio, CE marking + RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU + WEEE Directive 2012/19/EU.

19 min read

History of electric scooters

Bird Inc. and the pioneer's trap of the sharing class (2017–2024)

A standalone historical profile of Bird Rides / Bird Global: founder Travis VanderZanden (former Lyft COO and Uber VP of International Growth), the launch of the first dockless fleet in Santa Monica on 15 September 2017 on adapted Xiaomi M365 units, the criminal complaint filed by the City of Santa Monica in December 2017 and the $300,000 plea agreement of February 2018, the peak valuation of $2.5 billion in January 2019 (the fastest US 'unicorn' on record), the hardware iterations Bird Zero (October 2018) → Bird One (May 2019) → Bird Two (August 2019) → Bird Three (May 2021 with IP68 battery and AEB), the SPAC merger with Switchback II on the NYSE on 4 November 2021 at an implied $2.3 billion valuation, the financial restatement of 14 November 2022 (overstatement of revenue for 2020–2022), the acquisition of Spin from Tier for $19 million on 19 September 2023, delisting from the NYSE on 22 September 2023 at a market cap of $7 million, Chapter 11 in the Southern District of Florida on 20 December 2023, the asset purchase by Third Lane Mobility Inc. for ~$145 million on 5 April 2024, and why being first in a market does not translate into unit economics — the 'pioneer's trap' of dockless sharing as a case study.

13 min read

History of electric scooters

Segway-Ninebot: from inventing personal mobility to the OEM foundation of the electric scooter industry (1999–2026)

A standalone historical profile of the company without which the modern consumer and sharing class of electric scooters does not exist: Dean Kamen's Segway Inc. (founded 1999 in Bedford, New Hampshire; Segway PT launch on 3 December 2001 on Good Morning America; commercial failure — 140,000 units across 19 years against a 40,000-per-year target; end of PT production on 15 July 2020), Ninebot Inc. (founded 2012 in Beijing by Wang Ye and Gao Lufeng from Beihang University, pivot from police robots to self-balancing mobility, USITC complaint filed by Segway against Ninebot in September 2014), the merger of 15 April 2015 ($75M acquisition of Segway financed by an $80M round from Xiaomi / Sequoia / Shunwei / WestSummit), consolidation under the Segway-Ninebot brand with HQ in Beijing and manufacturing in Changzhou and Shenzhen, the role as OEM foundation of Xiaomi M365 (December 2016) and the sharing fleet's first years — Bird (September 2017 on M365) / Lime (February 2018 on Ninebot ES2) / Spin, the in-house KickScooter retail line (ES1/ES2/ES4 late 2017, Max G30 August 2019, F-series November 2021, GT-series 2022 with GT2 SuperScooter 6,000 W peak / 70 km/h), the Nasdaq STAR Market IPO of 29 October 2020 (ticker 689009, CDR structure, ~$7.5B valuation), the launch of Segway Powersports at EICMA 2019 (Snarler ATV, Fugleman and Villain UTV), Navimow robotic lawnmower from 2022, the diversification and completion of 'de-Xiaomi-isation' in 2024 (Xiaomi stake below 5%), the recall of 220,000 Max G30P/G30LP units on 20 March 2025 for a folding-mechanism defect, the 14.196 billion yuan annual revenue in 2024 (+38.87% YoY), cumulative sales of 13+ million eKickScooters and ~80% of the global sharing fleet — and why a single company unifies all the previous five profiles (Razor / Micro / Bird / Lime / Xiaomi M365) as their shared engineering and manufacturing denominator.

13 min read

History of electric scooters

Xiaomi M365 and the canonization of the consumer electric scooter (2016–2026)

A standalone historical profile of the Xiaomi Mijia M365 — the folding electric scooter Xiaomi unveiled in Beijing on 15 December 2016 and that over ten years became the reference platform for the entire consumer industry: the foundations of the Xiaomi + Ninebot partnership (April 2015 investment in an $80 million round and the joint acquisition of Segway), the canonical specifications (250 W BLDC, 36 V, 7.8 Ah, ~280 Wh of LG 18650 cells, 25 km/h, 30 km range, IP54, 8.5″ pneumatic tyres, regenerative + disc braking, ~12.5 kg, single-stroke folding stem), its role as the hardware base for the first Bird (September 2017) and Lyft (2018) fleets in Santa Monica, the cultural phenomenon of hacking (m365 DownG, ScooterHacking, botox.bz custom firmware, unlock to 30+ km/h, Zimperium CVE-2019-7367), the market evolution (M365 Pro July 2019, Essential / 1S July 2020, Pro 2 July 2020, 3 Lite June 2022, 4 Ultra November 2022, 4 Pro 2023, 5 Pro January 2025), the split between the Mi and Ninebot Kickscooter brands after the ES2 launch in late 2017, and why every modern specification — IP54+, ~12 kg of weight, ~30 km of range, single-stroke stem, rear disc brake — is the formalization of the M365 specifically, rather than of some abstract 'average scooter'.

13 min read