This was posted 2 years 2 months 10 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Segway Ninebot KickScooter F30 $699 (Save $300) + Delivery ($0 C&C/In-Store) @ JB Hi-Fi

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segway f30 kickscooter.Save $300 - $699 jb hifi
starts 17/02/22 ends 02/03/22

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  • -1

    Shows as $999 for me

    • +17

      cause its not tomorrow yet

      • +1

        Whoops, missed that. Sorry!

      • If it is not tomorrow yet, it is definitely not yesterday :)

      • -6

        cause its not tomorrow yet

        Why not ?

      • It will never be tomorrow

  • +4

    Be careful where you ride this if you live in NSW

    https://9now.nine.com.au/a-current-affair/sydney-man-fined-t…

    • Shame because roads are the most fun. Met some real amazing cops curious about it all while going on the road.

      • would have thought same rules as bikes ….. i’m in vic and e-scooters pass me all the time when i cycle to work along bike paths …..
        rental scooters are being trialed in some inner city suburb in melbourne though already a PITA when people try to ride them in shopping strips that have cafes and tables ….. people don’t ride bikes in those areas (due to crowds and space and kids and dogs) but scooters being smaller people seem to want to ride them all the way to the toilet or the cafe table where they will have lunch …. often in groups on scooters …… might eventually give a bad reputation to scooter riders who commute to work or do the right thing in crowded shopping areas. other problem is lock the scooter and someone else will take it and you need to walk home …… dont lock it so it can’t be rented and someone might ride off with it …. you need to bring a bike lock and lock it up to be assured of a ride home rather than walk.

        • bring a bike lock and lock it up

          These rental scooter are meant to be shared, you can't lock one up for yourself.

          If that's what you want to do, buy one for yourself.

  • +12

    OzBargain eScooter Bingo for those playing at home.

    • Me in the bot right

    • This is excellent, thank you

    • brilliant! can you do one for micro sd cards as well?

      edit: oh i ghought this was a drinking game.

  • This or xiaomi pro 2?

  • Saw an idiot riding one of these doing about 20km/hr on the footpath on a shopping strip this afternoon…
    Lucky nobody stepped out of shop in front of him.

    • Wait until you nearly back into one being ridden down shopping aisle in the supermarket! 🤨

    • First the cars came for the roads.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQ97CGj6TPY

      Then the scooters came for the footpaths.

      I'm not sure where the pedestrians go from there.

    • 20km/hr on footpath is totally legal in Qld… but agree you would be an idiot to go at that speed on a crowded shopping strip where people are stepping out of shops and people are walking with their kids. I usually slow down to walking pace whenever I get anywhere near a pedestrian - can't predict what they are going to do.

      • 20km/hr on footpath is totally legal in Qld…

        Which is ridiculous if you're doing that on a footpath, in front of doorways where people are likely to just step out of at any time…

        There need to be explicit and enforced rules around where these can be used safely.

        A good start would be to have these things registered to make riders accountable.

        • Registering these would not make sense as they are not meant to be used on the road (at least in Qld). Should we register bicyles as well? I would argue bicycles are just as dangerous in the wrong hands and can certainly go faster than the legal top speed of a scooter? Mind you, in Qld you have to register a mobility scooter if you use it in a public area so maybe you're onto something. As a regular rider who tries to do the right thing, I agree with your other comments… they are already not permitted in some high traffic pedestrian areas but would like to see speed limits in some areas as you have described.

          • +1

            @pierrejb: I'm all for a bicycle registration system. Japan has one that works well imo.

          • @pierrejb:

            Registering these would not make sense as they are not meant to be used on the road

            In Melbourne, they must only be used on the roads for all the ones in the current trial.

          • +2

            @pierrejb:

            Should we register bicyles as well?

            Definitely.

            How else can you identify and report someone if they break a law, cause some damage or injure someone?

            • @jv: Well said sir, you make a good point! I'm all for registering bicycles and scooters. Some interesting differences between Melbourne and Qld though … you can't ride scooters on main roads or streets in the Brisbane CBD, so riders pretty much have to use the footpath. e-scooters are permitted on foopaths, bike paths, dedicated bikeways, green streets and local streets where the speed limit is less than 50 km/hr and there is no dividing line. The Qld Premier has today announced that the max speed limit on footpaths will be dropped to 12 km/hr so that is a good development. Cyclists of any age can also ride on footpaths in Qld but I know this is different in other states.

            • @jv: Qld e-scooter reforms announced today:
              Slashing footpath speed limits in half, to 12km/h
              Proactive safety campaign to inform users of road rules, parking and their responsibilities
              Partner with industry for a new e-scooter users guide at point of sale (privately owned e-scooters)
              Mandate warning devices (such as a bell)
              Establish an e-scooter parking working group to create clear rules for e-scooter parking to keep footpaths clear for pedestrians and people with disabilities
              Allowing e-scooters on segregated bikeways, including the Veloway
              Examine further e-scooter use on shared bikeways and on road bike lanes, pending further stakeholder and local government consultation
              Improved data recording and injury reporting
              Improved signage and markings
              Road rule amendments
              Creation of high-risk e-scooter offences, including drink and drug driving penalties, through legislative reforms
              Cracking down on dangerous and irresponsible e-scooter behaviour such as speeding through tougher enforcement and appropriate penalties

              • +1

                @pierrejb:

                Slashing footpath speed limits in half, to 12km/h

                That will only be useful if it is enforced…

                • @jv: Yes, we’ll have to wait and see but they have been pretty good at enforcing helmets and the single rider policy. Regularly see cops stopping people but not sure whether they are actually fined. Wonder if we will see cops on e-scooters giving chase if riders don’t stop?

  • +7

    sold legally everywhere yet cant be ridden legally anywhere. this comedy should come to an end.

    • +2

      Totally legal to ride in Queensland

    • Legal in TAS on footpaths and roads.

  • 30km range
    i will give it a pass

  • +1

    Still a few F20A scooters at my local Aldi for $399a couple of days ago

    • +1

      Are they really $399? Saw a few at my local Aldi yesterday and they were $499.

      • Started at $499 but at Erina reduced to $399 last week

    • Where is you local?

  • lots of rental scoorters in my local streets in bayside melbourne, wondering when people will repurpose them by changing controllers and BMS ? seems the hacks are already on the internet from users in USA and europe.
    some are already going way of the o-bike in rivers , though these have alarms when charged.

    • +2

      I still don't understand why people throw bikes and scooters into the Yarra.

      • probably because its the closest river in the cbd.

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