It’s the perfect way to get to that business lunch
across town. Power executive, meet the electric
skateboard.
It’s fun, it’s fast, it’s legal to operate without a
drivers license and it’s a hit with fun-loving people of
all ages.
Steve Miloshev, of Greenwit Technologies and
subsidiary store E-Ride, told 24 hours when he started
selling electric skateboards three years ago, he
thought his main clientele would be teenagers.
Instead he found 40-year-olds and older making most
of the purchases.
The assumption is that it’s dangerous,
said Steve Miloshev of Greenwit Technologies and president
of E-Ride, but “I’m 45 years old, I’ve
never skateboarded before this, and I feel very confident
because of its smooth braking and acceleration.”
But, for those more advanced riders, the
e-skateboard can accelerate up to 30 kilometers in
four seconds flat, he added.
It works like this: a small, powerful electric motor is
mounted onto the skateboard, and is controlled by a
wireless hand remote control. Push a trigger lever
forward to brake and backwards to accelerate.
And here’s where the savings kick in: for “only six
cents, you can go 100 kilometers compared to 12
litres of gas – that’s $12 – in a car,” Miloshev said.
Once an environmental engineer, Miloshev was
inspired to move from repairing environmental
damage to protecting the environment.
“We can repair the soil, and clean the water, but
whatever goes into the air stays there,” he said.
He saw his first electric bike while working for a
Canadian company in China, and decided to make at
go at bringing the electric-power age to Vancouver.
E-Ride sells electric bikes, scooters and skateboards
at their store at 1702 West 4th Avenue.