The physics of an Urban Arrow front-bucket e-bike — and why 5 PSI can mean the difference between a smooth turn and a crash.
Every turn is a negotiation between gravity, centripetal force, and the tiny patch of rubber touching the road.
At proper inflation, the front tire's contact patch is about 3x4 cm — a postage stamp holding you to the road. A flat tire spreads this into a wide, deformed smear with far less grip per unit area.
In a corner, bike and rider lean inward. The tire's round profile rolls onto its shoulder, maintaining a clean contact patch. A flat tire can't do this — it folds and deforms unpredictably.
Counter-steering works because the tire generates camber thrust from its lean. A flat tire has a mushy, delayed response — and may suddenly let go entirely.
An Urban Arrow puts the cargo bucket — and your passenger — ahead of the front axle. That changes everything.
260 lbs total, with roughly 55% of the weight on the front wheel due to the bucket-forward design. The front tire bears the brunt of cornering loads.
Going downhill shifts even more weight forward. Combined with the bucket load, the front tire can see 60-65% of total weight — and a flat tire buckles under this.
The Urban Arrow's extended frame means the front wheel is far from the rider's center of mass. Once the front goes, recovery is nearly impossible.
Ride the Urban Arrow downhill with a flat front tire. Use arrow keys to steer. Try to make the corner.