...and it is AWESOME!
...(great stuff here)...
It turns out I was thinking about it all wrong!
...(greater stuff here!)...
SO HAPPY!
Hi Lone Mainer! Another NC Mustachian here. I bike commute when I can, but it's a kind of massive thing for me, 32 miles each way.
I use an ebike, and although some people say "that's cheating", I say "you're not making any sense. It's not a sports event, it's transportation". I use electric more on the ride in so I arrive without being sopping wet, then on the way home, I pedal my ass off to get a great workout AND to go faster.
My auto commute takes 1 hour, 10 minutes each way. For days when there's an accident, it can stretch to 1 hour, 35 minutes either direction (usually the ride home does that).
The bike commute takes 1 hour, 20 minutes each way. I've made it in 1 hour, 13 minutes by pedaling even harder.
When you said "I was seeing it all wrong", I could have said the same thing. I thought, to equal the time it takes in the car, I'd need a 40mph-capable ebike. Not true, for two reasons:
1) The ebike doesn't have to wait in traffic. That's a big deal.
2) Average speed across any given path is affected far more by the number of STOPS and not the top speed of the vehicle. So in that way, if a bicycle doesn't have to make a stop that a car does, the bicycle just netted 20-60 seconds and a higher average speed traversing the stoplight than the car does.
Now, I'm not advocating running stoplights - far from it. What I have observed is that the slower cruise speed of the bicycle increases the liklihood that I will encounter the stoplight after it's already switched back to green, triggered by the waiting autommobiles.
I've measured, and seen that when I'm in the car during rush hour, I'll stop an average of 80% of the time. when I'm on the bike, I'll stop an average of about 50% of the time. That's a huge time gain for the slower vehicle. So much so that by averaging 30mph on the bike, I can equal the time of the much faster automobile.
Now here's the neat thing: my Prius has an "average MPH" figure on the trip odometer, and when I use it on the commute, it reads...about 31mph. At first I thought this was bogus, but it's not. The average plummets at stoplights and doesn't rise much at all during the (rare) moments when I'm at cruise speed.
So, yeah: I was seeing it wrong too, and the exercise is fantastic. Overall, it's a net gain in time and a HUGE gain in fitness! The only real problems you have to deal with are flat tires, wind and rain/precip. And I've been able to successfully find workarounds for those problems.
SAME ROAD, SAME RIGHTS!