TfL

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

User guide

Defensive riding in mixed motor traffic: lane positioning, primary vs secondary position, door zone, right hook + left cross at the intersection, SMIDSY / look-but-failed-to-see — how to avoid conflicts with cars

Unlike braking technique, cornering, or night riding, a separate safety layer is the **strategy of interacting with motor traffic**: where to position yourself in the lane, how to read drivers before an intersection, where the door zone sits, what right hook and left cross are, and why statistically the **intersection** — not the straight section — is the more dangerous segment (NACTO: >40% of urban bike fatalities in 2022 happened at intersections; UK DfT 2022: e-scooter casualty rate is three times higher than for pedal cycles). This guide transfers to the e-scooter the classic principles of vehicular cycling (John Forester, *Effective Cycling* 1976, MIT Press 7th ed. 2012), Smart Cycling of the League of American Bicyclists, the NACTO Urban Bikeway Design Guide 3rd ed. 2025, the AASHTO Guide for the Development of Bicycle Facilities, ROSPA UK road-safety guidance, IIHS, and AAA Foundation research. Covers: lane-positioning theory (primary vs secondary position; why 'as far right as possible' is the worst strategy); door zone (12-27% of urban bike collisions — Wikipedia; Dutch Reach countermeasure); right hook (a turning vehicle crosses the bike lane), left cross (an oncoming driver turns across your path); SMIDSY / look-but-failed-to-see as a perceptual phenomenon (Hurt Report 1981 motorcycle baseline, 75% of motorcycle crashes involve a passenger car, 66% are ROW violations); 5 active-signalling rules (positioning + eye-contact + speed-modulation + escape-path + worst-case escape); why a bike lane is not always safer than the road; how to ride with the flow (vehicular) vs in a facility (segregated); a 30-minute practice drill.

13 min read

User guide

Transporting your e-scooter: car, train, plane — watt-hour limits and carrier rules

How to transport an e-scooter in the trunk of a car (wheel orientation, tie-down, Li-ion storage temperature window), on trains in different countries (Amtrak ≤22.7 kg + tire ≤2″ + UL certification, Deutsche Bahn folded → 700×500×300 mm as hand baggage, TfL and Network Rail UK with a blanket ban on e-scooters since 2025, Eurostar ban with a children's kick-scooter exception ≤85 cm), and on aircraft (IATA DGR / FAA PackSafe / UK CAA: ≤100 Wh — carry-on, 100–160 Wh — only with airline approval and max 2 spare, >160 Wh — forbidden on passenger flights, which automatically rules out almost every consumer model: Xiaomi M365 280 Wh, Mi 4 Pro 446 Wh, Apollo City 624 Wh, Apollo Phantom ~1217 Wh, NAMI Burn-E 2 Max 2304 Wh, Dualtron Thunder >2500 Wh). Concrete policies of Delta, United, Southwest, JetBlue, American, Air Canada, WestJet — all ban recreational lithium-powered rideables. Why: FAA SAFO 10017 / SAFO 25002 on thermal runaway, IATA 30 % SoC recommendation 2025 → mandatory 2026, mandatory 49 CFR 173.185 and UN 38.3 for shipment.

13 min read

User guide

How to choose an electric scooter for your scenario

Scenario-driven scooter selection: city commute 5–15 km, last-mile + transit (TfL personal-scooter ban from 13 December 2021; Amtrak ≤ 22.7 kg + UL/CSA/NSF-certified battery), weekend cruising, off-road (legally a motor vehicle on USFS land), child rider (AAP recommends no motorized scooters under 16; ASTM F2641), delivery courier (~30–40 orders/day, accelerated battery wear), shared rental (Lime geofencing, TfL 12.5 mph cap, Paris ban from 01.09.2023). Cold-weather limits −10 °C (Segway-Ninebot) / 0 °C (Apollo), climb energy ≈ 3 Wh per kg per km of vertical, folding-stem failure (Xiaomi M365 recall June 2019, 10,257 units), registration: eKFV insurance plate, UK driving licence cat Q, Ukraine ПЛЕТ ≤ 1 kW no licence.

13 min read