It has a motor, so I'd say yeah, but I am not a lawyer.As it would apply to "No Motorized Vehicles" in Wharton.
Motorized bicycle means a pedal bicycle… …powered by an electric drive motor and said bicycle is capable of a maximum speed of no more than 25 miles per hour on a flat surface.
I think some of them don't even have a place for them. Could be wrong.Did you read 7:2-3.9 (E)?
I read that in the VVUM Q&A (last question) and shook my head
Registration, Insurance, and a plate for a motorized bicycle in the woods?
Never noticed a plate on the ones I see zipping around on the streets…
There’s different classes of e-bikes. Up to 20 mph you don’t need license, registration and tags. They can be restricted locally but generally are treated like regular bicycles by the state. The maintained mtb trails in Wharton don’t allow them for instance.
Micromobility - The New Jersey Bicycle and Pedestrian Resource Center
Welcome to your one-stop repository for information related to electric micromobility in New Jersey! “Micromobility” refers to smaller, lighter, low-speednjbikeped.org
Before paying for a 75lb e-bike. Maybe try a regular pedal power fat-tire-bike. Much less weight. Much less problems. Four to five inch wide tires on a good light fat-bike makes easy work of all but the worst sand roads.I had actually been considering something like this as a relatively inexpensive, very low environmental impact way to get back onto some roads that I can definitely not get my car down and which would otherwise be long hikes:
RadRover™ 6 Plus Electric Fat Tire Bike
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But I would need to research further to understand if this would be legal. The park service code posted above only makes me even more uncertain.