Everything You Need to Know About Fat Tire Scooters

A short guide to help start your journey with fat tire scooters
If you’re beginning to discover what fat tire electric scooters are all about, you have come to the right place. In this condensed guide by Soversky, you’ll find the answers you need to determine if a fat tire electric scooter is the right choice for you.

In this new guide, you’ll learn:

What they are
How they work
Benefits of owning one
How safe are they

The fat tire electric scooter is the most advanced electric scooter in the world. It is ideal for users who travel over rugged terrain or want a safer ride in wet weather conditions.

Their stylish fat tires can easily recognize them. They also have a full-size deck to place your feet on and an ultra-tough, patented frame construction for durability. This means you get a fun, comfortable, and safe ride.
Fat tire scooters are not confused with electric bikes or older, outdated, thin tire scooters or mopeds powered by gas motors. To see the difference, you can check out our electric bikes or the more modern skinny tire electric mopeds we offer on our product pages.

Electric bikes use an electric motor and battery like an electric scooter, but that is where the similarity ends. E-bikes look like traditional bicycles and come in various options, such as e-road bikes, mountain e-bikes, cargo e-bikes, e-hybrid bikes, and even e-bikes that fold. The critical thing to note with these bikes is that you must pedal them for the motor to kick in. The added help gives you the extra power to go further, which is excellent for new riders or seniors needing the extra mile.

Older designed two- or four-stroke engines power thin tire scooters and mopeds and are similar to motorcycles. These engines are fueled by gas and usually powered by motors under 50cc. Compared to electric motors, they cost more to drive, maintain, and fix if there is a breakdown.

Gas engines also contribute to the air pollution that climate scientists say drives global warming. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, “The vapors given off when gasoline evaporates and the substances produced when gasoline is burned (carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, particulate matter, and unburned hydrocarbons) contribute to air pollution. Burning gasoline also produces carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas.”

 


Post time: Nov-29-2022