http://gas2.org/2015/08/07/electric-motorcycle-costs-performance-vs-gas-motorcycle-costs-performance/
Electric Motorcycle Costs & Performance vs Gas Motorcycle Costs &
Performance
August 7th, 2015  Mike Barnard,CleanTechnica

[images  
http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/main-qimg-a06587ede37dff3ba80f1d360f49461b.jpeg

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/ebike-tco.png
(line chart)

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/Screen-Shot-2015-08-05-at-4.30.58-PM.png
(table chart)

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/F800-vs-SR-depreciation.png
(line chart)

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/Screen-Shot-2015-08-05-at-4.21.26-PM.png
(table chart)

http://cleantechnica.com/files/2015/08/slider-4-1024x614.jpg
(Lightning LS-218)

videos
http://youtu.be/KuoSp2tFtGI
Lightning @Pike’s Peak

http://youtu.be/pG9HOnZCDK8
]

What is the fastest production motorcycle in the world? What bike beat every
other motorcycle and most cars up Pike’s Peak in 2013? What motorcycle had
massive brake and shock upgrades while getting almost $2,000 cheaper in the
past two years? What motorcycle is cheapest to own and run over several
years?

The answers are electric motorcycles from Lightning and Zero. The rate of
change in electric motorcycles is truly phenomenal, and mostly outshadowed
by Tesla’s great job of getting amazing press by delivering amazing electric
cars.

Let’s start with Zero.
The graphic on the right shows the 2011 to 2014 evolution of the Zero
motorcycle: quadrupling of range, 50% increase in top speed, 150% more
horsepower, and 150% increase in torque.

What it doesn’t show is the price or a couple of other key specs. In 2014,
Zero also massively improved the brakes and shocks on the bike while
dropping the price by $400. In 2015, the company left the specs of the bikes
alone, but dropped the price tag by $1,350. How were they able to do that?
Rapidly declining battery costs, mostly.

What is the Zero SR most comparable to? Well, in terms of torque, it’s up
there with 1000 cc gas bikes, while in terms of horsepower, it’s equivalent
to 600 cc bikes. That means it’s very quick off the line, with the SR rated
at 3.3 seconds to 60 mph. The top speed isn’t as insane as bigger bikes,
topping out around 100 mph — also known as the speed at which fines start
being enough to fund municipal budgets and having your bike taken away from
you is a serious possibility.

My last bike was a BMW F800ST, a beautifully mannered and very quick sport
tourer from Bavaria. It took 3.5 seconds to get to 60 mph. I only took it
above 100 mph a couple of times, and not by very much. Mostly, I enjoyed the
quickness of it and cornering on it, rather than exotic speed.

I test drove an older Zero S a couple of weeks ago and started seriously
thinking that maybe another bike was in my future. It was very quick, had no
problem keeping up with the 650 cc sport bike that the staff member was
riding and handled adequately. I was a bit disappointed that I couldn’t try
out the SR with the better shocks and acceleration, but I was more surprised
that the oil town I’m currently living in had electric motorcycles at all.

ebike tcoThe exploration led to wondering what the total cost of ownership
would be comparable to, similar to the assessment that one enterprising
husband did a year or so ago between a Honda Odyssey minivan and a base
model Tesla. He found it was almost the same price over 8 years of
ownership, and was able to justify having a dead sexy car instead of a
sex-killing minivan. I decided a comparison between a decent entry-level
bike, the Suzuku SFV650, the Zero S and Zero SR, and my old BMW F800ST would
be interesting.

It’s well known that it’s a lot cheaper to run and maintain electric
vehicles. The assessment above took purchase prices, safety gear, fuel cost,
insurance, depreciation, and annual maintenance costs into account. One key
difference is that, right now, electric bikes are depreciating a lot faster
than gas bikes. This isn’t because they are wearing out faster but because
new bikes are so much cheaper and better. It’s like the curse of the Tesla
owner who bought a Model S 60 a week before the Model S 70D became the base
model.

As can be seen, a Zero S is only about $4,400 more expensive over 8 years
than an entry-level Suzuki, or 16%. And the Zero SR is only about $1,400
more expensive than my BMW F800ST over 8 years. When we start talking about
BMW prices, that’s an irrelevant amount.

What if depreciation is taken out of the mix, however? The numbers change a
lot.

The BMW is suddenly $4,700 more expensive than an SR. If you aren’t worried
about depreciation, all of a sudden, the SR starts looking financially
appealing. The Zero S, not shown, becomes about $800 cheaper than the
entry-level Suzuki, making it a very inexpensive choice if you are in the
market for a bike.

The maintenance assessment was based on percentage likelihood of specific
major repairs and maintenance such as annual tire changes, annual brake
adjustments, annual tuneups and lower likelihood expenses such as oil pump
changes, fuel pump failures, and the like.

But those numbers are based on the USA, where gas is fairly ludicrously
cheap at about $3 per gallon compared to places where it’s more sensibly
priced to drive market behavior that’s aligned with little things like
climate change and pollution. The numbers also exclude any rebates such as
California’s $900.

The Canadian average is $4.16 per gallon right now, and the European average
is around $6 per gallon. In Canada, an SR is about $5,700 cheaper than the
BMW over 8 years, while the S is about $1,700 cheaper than the Suzuki. And
in Europe the numbers are even more startling, $8,400 and $4,300,
respectively. Those are decisive numbers. They pay for a lot of upgrades to
the Zeros, undoubtedly including new factory batteries with much greater
range.

Are the Zeros perfect? Not a chance. With range extenders, they are limited
to about 185 miles of range and slow electric vehicle charging because they
aren’t on the Supercharger network yet. You can buy and daisy chain
additional chargers and hook them up to CHADeMO chargers — another extra
price option — and get charge time down to about 90 minutes, but really,
Tesla’s got this figured out and is building the infrastructure needed, so I
personally hope that everyone just gets on board.

However, those are short-term limitations. With the very rapid expansion of
Tesla Superchargers and other, less effective options, it’s going to be
fairly quick that rapid charging will be baked in. 270+ miles range and 10
minutes to charge? That starts looking very appealing and likely something
that will be available in the next couple of years.

The Zero line is very interesting, and includes dual sport and dirt bike
versions as well, but they aren’t the fastest production motorcycles in the
world. And while they do just fine getting up Pike’s Peak, running near the
middle of the pack this year, they aren’t the fastest bike up the fabled
mountain in its 99-year race history.

That’s the Lightning LS-218.
The 218 is for miles per hour, which is 350 kmh in most of the world. They
hit that on the Bonneville Salt Flats during Speed Week. Actually, they were
closer to 219 miles per hour, but they aren’t pushy, it seems.

As for Pike’s Peak, they took their bike there in 2013 and beat every other
motorcycle up the mountain by 20 seconds, and most of the cars as well.
Other people took notice, obviously, as this year the winning car at Pike’s
Peak was electric, and that was with its rear motor pack failing less than
half way up. A new course record, the winning time, and the driver and team
were disappointed as they expected 30 seconds better.

What’s really amusing about the Lightning wins is that they powered both the
speed record and the Pike’s Peak runs with solar panels they had mounted on
top of their transport van. Each speed run cost them about 8 cents. Compare
that to the other vehicles, which depend on a massive infrastructure for
digging up multi-million-year-old fossilized plants, transporting them often
thousands of miles, refining them, then refining them more, then
distributing the resulting gasoline potentially thousands more miles before
it gets into a gas tank. And then the gas has a shelf life of maybe a year
before it will foul the internal combustion engines that use it.

It’s worth pointing out that two mainstream motorcycle companies now have
electric bikes in production or prototype too, although they aren’t nearly
as interesting as the Zero and Lightning. Polaris, which manufactures and
sells Indian and Victory motorcycles, acquired Brammo in its Victory brand
earlier this year and just released an updated Empulse, making it the first
mainstream bike company with an electric motorcycle in its lineup. The
Brammo went its own way by actually bothering to have a gear box, which
pretty much every other electric vehicle company in the world realized was a
bad decision; most people who ride the Brammo just leave it in third,
apparently. And Harley Davidson of all companies actually has been showing
of an electric motorcycle prototype, something unlikely to make it to
production in my opinion. (Harley’s CEO claims it’s coming before 2020.)

Is it time to buy an electric bike? If you are in the market for a new bike,
you’d be foolish not to look at the option seriously. And in not too many
years, you’ll probably be foolish to buy a gas bike of any sort.

I’ll leave you with a regular rider reacting to the acceleration of the Zero
S — not even the SR — at 3:17 in this road test video.
[© Sustainable Enterprises Media]




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