I've been looking at electric trials bikes, just out of curiosity, and am becoming really impressed by them. It seems like you could produce a really excellent electric trail bike too.
Ive seen various reports of the E trials machine lasting over 4 hours on a charge, and they are lighter than their petrol counterparts. Going electric also means no oils if dropped, no oil or air filter maintenance and no petrol costs!
Here's a vid of a GasGas example:
and an Electric Motion one (seems to have some relation to scorpa):
It has me wondering if people are ready to move over to electric bikes, if and when the machines become available?
"Not for me 4hrs is only a half day ride , if a trail bike existed that could do 120 miles on one charge I could be tempted"
Range always seems to be the downside with electric, but since with an elec bike range means weight 4 hours is probably just right for competition/events. You could always carry a second battery pack?
I imagine when elec bikes become more common, tailored battery pack size will become as common as oversized tanks are on our petrol machines.
Ive thought about elec mountain bikes too, but you need the pedals to stay legal and i can see that being a pain. Plus they strike me as pretty overpriced for what they are.
Surely most of us bike riders are petrol heads, electric just wouldn't be the same
Never thought I would move to a fuel injected bike, but now I have one I find it's excellent - so never say never
It's funny i hated the idea of FI originally too, i suppose mostly because i felt i had finally got a handle on carbs. I don't have an FI bike yet but now see it as a plus rather than negative.
I guess im a petrol head too; i love the rumble of a happy motor, but loud bikes have always been a turn off for me and i definitely don't agree with the loud bikes save lives theory.
Im no expert, but suspect performance wise electric has the potential to dominate motorsport if some bright spark can figure out a way to store enough charge on them, i guess if that happens all petrol bikes will end up classics.
-- Edited by Albert on Friday 3rd of July 2015 10:47:37 AM
Lithium based batteries are good but have a lot of draw backs, capacity degradation for one - this happens with time regardless of use (10% a year for some types). Also Lithium batteries don't like being deeply discharged so if you really ring their necks you will be drastically reducing their life/capacity, and they aren't cheap to replace.
The next battery technology may be just around the corner, and when that happens it'll be game changer for sure, the future's bright..., the future's Graphene!
Swiss lakes have banned the internal combustion engine, so the marine industry are getting forced in E power. 6 Li-Ion batteries can power a ski boat at 60 knots for 6 hours, with a full recharge in 2 hours!
I think the technology is here, we just need to embrace it.
Swiss lakes have banned the internal combustion engine, so the marine industry are getting forced in E power. 6 Li-Ion batteries can power a ski boat at 60 knots for 6 hours, with a full recharge in 2 hours!
That's interesting stuff.
Do you have any long term owner reviews/feedback on how the battery packs are holding up?
However..., what you have detailed there is a new requirement making the old technology obsolete, but not a new technology replacing and old technology.
Not yet, but we havent had a complaint in two years. That said, we operate a 80% discharge window, so the batteries should give 2000+ cycles. Any complaint and we remotely access the batteries via gprs and normally its user error - trying to recharge in 90 mins etc..