% aerostich.com/zbz is a blog of riding a Zero FX Electric-Motorcycle in
freezing winter conditions. While the first (20min) video shows the to-work
rider cautiously going less than the speed limit, the second (12min) video
(bottom) has a (possibly different)  rider who is less chatty, cautious, and
more bold on night-time streets. 

In both cases the issues incurred (traffic lights not sensing cycles, cars
wanting to go much faster, etc.) are not about the fact that the Zero EV is
Electric, but about the less traction two wheels have vs 4 wheels do:
ability in snow/sleet/slush to stop, swerve, or just drive up a driveway (as
seen at the end of the second going-home video). 

There is some self-promotion of the host company's clothing/gear products,
but I found the blog useful and informative. Clearly, winter is not that
much of a hardship those with an EV-grin %

https://rideapart.com/articles/randys-new-routine-analysis-winter-riding
Randy's New Routine: An Analysis Of Winter Riding
March 15, 2016

[images  
https://cdn.rideapart.com/wp-content/uploads/2016%2F03%2FLeap-Day-Zero-3.jpg
(note the front skull ornamentation)

https://cdn.rideapart.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/2016-03-08-16.jpg

https://cdn.rideapart.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Leap-Day-Zero-1.jpg
(charging in the snow)

https://cdn.rideapart.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/RC-Leg-Roadgrime.jpg
(eMcycle suit  Real Leg-Roadgrime)


video
https://youtu.be/TbgjIo8Qa1A
ZeroBelowZero - Snowy Commute to Aerostich 01/25/2016
Aerostich  Jan 28, 2016
Join Randy as he makes a morning commute to Aerostich on the Zero FX
Electric Motorcycle after a few inches of fresh snowfall. January 25, 2016
Find more about #ZeroBelowZero at aerostich.com/zbz
]

We ran a story in January about Aerostich's wild plan to test the Zero FX in
freezing Duluth, Minnesota. With their permission, we will be sharing the
blogged thoughts of their select group of testers. Stay warm and enjoy!

The New Routine
Not an exciting title, but like Andy, Kyle and Bruce have touched on, the
routine is setting in. The initial excitement and fear of the unknown is
being replaced by the relaxed routine of winter commuting.

The first time you try something new and unusual, your mind tells you that
the activity is overly risky. At least mine did. The first ride seemed as
far out as if we were planning a 100 mile trek in the Arctic. Only somewhat
unstable minds would consider such a foolish activity as riding a lightly
studded electric motorcycle all winter in Duluth.

My initial feelings as I rode was that I was doing something strange, weird
or wrong. Maybe all of the above. As I rode past police officers I felt
somehow guilty. I imagined that I would get pulled over and get a good
talking to about my foolish and dangerous behavior. If I fell in traffic and
caused a scene, would I be ticketed?

When a car driver goes too fast on a snowy road and ends up in the ditch,
police and first responders come to their aid. Usually no lectures about
traveling too fast for conditions. Going into the ditch is just a part of
what occasionally happens during the Winter driving season. Generally no one
thinks of the driver as being irresponsible. My guess is that it is so
common that people are just used to it and don’t react anymore. Would it be
the same if a Winter motorcycle commuter had a fall in traffic and police
and first responders were needed?

Some years ago a customer who had ridden hundreds of miles in the Winter
from Canada was on his way to visit us in Duluth and had a fall downtown on
our bricked streets. He had navigated far more challenging road conditions
for hundreds of miles and followed that with an easily avoidable fall. I
know how it happens from falls during my road racing years. We get too
comfortable at times and let our guard down so we don’t see the continuing
risk or don’t recognize the risk.

Bricks and studded motorcycle tires are a bad combination. I spun a tire on
the Zero once when I thought I was only lightly accelerating. Once the
traction breaks the studded tire spins easily on brick. If I had been
leaning even a little, I could have gone down like our customer did. Winter
riding requires a more careful observation of surface types than warm
weather riding does.

Fortunately our customer was not hurt. He needed rescue only because of a
broken lever and gave us a call. I was the leader of our customer service
area at that time and his call was transferred to me. We had an old lift
gate cube truck at the time that could retrieve his motorcycle so I headed
downtown to lend a hand.

He had his motorcycle out of traffic and no scene had developed. We quickly
loaded his bike and were off in less than 10 minutes. How is that for
customer service! Back at Aerostich we put his bike in our garage and he
made calls to get parts shipped to us for repair. It was one or two days
before he departed in his Roadcrafter Classic to his next destination in the
states. We do our best to take care of our customers as they are the reason
we are in business and we appreciate them very much. Our garage has been
used by riders many times for motorcycle repairs and was recently converted
into a riders’ lounge that doubles as a garage.

Motorcycles are legally licensed vehicles that have the same rights and
restrictions in traffic and on roads that cars do. It is legal to use
motorcycles and cars all year round. However, the range of conditions a
motorcycle can be safely operated in are not the same as a car. When I rode
in a light snowstorm, I wasn’t comfortable in traffic as I couldn’t easily
keep up with the cars and I had to concentrate very hard to keep the bike
upright. It was a scary and adrenaline-producing experience. At my level of
riding skill the risk was too high, in my opinion. If we have another
heavier snow storm, I will take the cage to work.

In Duluth, my best estimate is that you can safely commute about 70% of the
Winter on a electric motorcycle. That is better than I had originally
thought and certainly worth the effort of preparing a motorcycle. You need
to be more aware of the weather conditions and forecast as you could get
stuck at your destination due to heavy snow. If you have an important
appointment, take the car that day. If you take out all the various
unrideable days and circumstances where riding isn’t reasonable, you still
have a significant majority of the Winter available for safe and fun
commuting. Who would have thought!

Highway vs Surface Streets
Have you ever wondered if you get less wet when you ride in the rain at high
speeds vs low speeds? Has anyone done computer modeling to find out the
answer to this important question? A quick search shows that many others
ponder this same question but mostly from a walking vs. running perspective.
The answer is complicated with many variables, such as wind speed, rain
direction and raindrop size. Mythbusters says if you minimize the variables,
you get wetter the faster you move through the rain. It's not an issue
either way for me as my gear takes care of the water almost all the time.

How about how cold you get on a commute? How does speed factor into the
equation? I have some insight here with years of early and late season
commutes in cold weather. A recent commute on the highway at 21°F produced
hands that were much colder than a previous -2°F commute at surface street
speeds. My time on the motorcycle was 5 minutes less on the highway yet my
hands were much colder.

Your body is limited in how fast it can create warmth in your extremities by
circulating blood. The highway speeds and resulting high wind removes heat
from your hands much faster than your body can replace it. At surface street
speeds the heat is still being removed faster than your body can replace it,
but the rate of heat loss is less so your hands end up warmer at the end of
your commute even though it took longer. Without hand guards to block the
wind, the highway isn’t workable for me on the Zero FX in very cold weather;
I have to stick with surface streets.

Glove Types
I have tried three types of gloves so far and the best gloves are not the
most insulated. In fact, they are the least insulated of the three by
thickness. The effectiveness of the insulation is likely playing a role here
too.

Due to the use of heated grips, a glove with a thin palm area allows for
more heat to transfer to my hands. The gloves I am using now are older
Olympia cold weather motorcycle gloves. They are an all leather version of
our Cold Weather Waterproof Glove (#1489). There is so much gear accumulated
over decades of time that I thought something I had would work for this
project. If I do this again, I will invest in a new set of motorcycle
specific winter gloves to avoid most of the frozen finger experiences. I
hear from Bruce that a glove liner makes a significant difference. Layering
works both for body insulation and hand insulation. Adding a glove liner for
the below zero days should do the trick.

A Longer Trip
It was time to try a trip longer than 7 miles on the Zero to see what was
like. A Saturday day-long retreat next to a local frozen lake 15 miles away
was the perfect opportunity. The weather was warm at 43°F so I didn’t turn
on the hand warmers as I wanted to experience the Zero’s range.

With warm temps and clear roads, this was a typical ride in the Spring or
Fall around Duluth. The sun was shining and I was grinning in my helmet
within blocks of leaving home. The simplicity of riding the Zero makes the
whole experience better. The throttle control for me is just so much fun! It
is hard to describe why it is fun. The precision and linear nature make you
feel like you have more control than with a gas-powered motorcycle. Sort of
what I imagine it is like to fly a fighter jet. Extreme precision and
control. It's a feeling of freedom.

As I reached 70 MPH for the first time, I got to see what it feels like at
higher speeds. People have asked me what I think is the equivalent engine
CCs of the Zero based on how fast it accelerates. My best guess is about 700
CC. It clearly out-accelerates my DR-650 Suzuki and my NT-650 Honda Hawk up
to 70 MPH. The effect of speed on power consumption is similar to my gas
motorcycles as efficiency quickly drops off at higher speeds. At 70 MPH you
can see the battery percentage click down in almost real time. I slowed down
some as I approached my destination to make sure I had enough battery charge
to make it home. I was at 57% remaining when I arrived so I felt I had 7% to
spare on the ride home.

The last block of the trip was on a slushy snow covered driveway leading to
the edge of the lake. The very first part was quite steep and resulted in
excessive rear wheel spin and fishtailing with little forward movement.
There was too much potential for a fall so I decided to walk the Zero up the
hill using the throttle to assist. I was a little winded by the time I got
to the top of the hill but it worked out just fine. Try doing that with a
gas powered bike while working the throttle and clutch for about a hundred
feet uphill on snow.

Slushy snow is the biggest problem for our Zero setup. There really isn’t a
good solution available as there is no firmness to the surface that will
accept force without moving. Packed snow or fresh snow that packs easily and
isn’t too deep are both fine as long as the hill slope is reasonable. On
this trip I had to compromise riding for a short distance but it wasn’t a
big deal.

On the way back to the road there was space in the driveway to build more
speed to get up the hill but when I started going down the hill, now I
couldn’t stop! I slid the locked up rear wheel down the hill and lightly
used the front brake until I hit the pavement of the cross road where I
could slow down. There were no cars on the road so things were fine but it
was a little scary. If I had it to do over again I would have tried to keep
my speed down earlier to see if I could ride down the hill with a controlled
speed. Front end wash out would have been more likely so maybe my first
instinct was the best choice.

Real Roadgrime
My Classic Roadcrafter [eMcycle suit] has thousands of commuting days on it,
but still looks pretty good. Seven mile short trips don’t build up layers of
road grime and bugs like day long trips do. My suit is in “dirt stasis”
where the rate of new grime accumulating on the suit is the same as the rate
of grime leaving the suit. It happens in part when riding in the rain and
part by the suit flexing as it moves and is taken off and put on. The
bending of the fabric causes small bug splats to crack and fall off.

The suit doesn’t reflect how often it is used and really hurts my street
cred. It makes me look like a poser who rides occasionally on warm dry days
instead of a rider who keeps detailed spreadsheets of every day of the year
with notes on weather conditions and the ridability of each day. I shouldn’t
care, right? The satisfaction of doing “the right thing” should be enough.
Who cares if anyone notices. All true and yet the cleanness of this suit
still tweaks that little bit of pride I haven’t been able to purge from
myself.

RC-Leg-Roadgrime
It has gotten worse since I added the Aerostich Road Grimed Astronaut patch
to the left sleeve in all its white backgrounded splendor. Now the situation
is worse as I have a super new looking patch on the sleeve bringing
attention to the obvious fact that I ride so much that my suit look likes a
Road Grimed Astronaut’s suit. But it doesn’t, the poser factor just went up.

Thankfully a leap day opportunity for real roadgrime presented itself when I
rode to work on the Zero shortly after about an inch and a half of snow
fell. It was warmer so the snow was mostly melted and the city road
maintenance trucks had just dumped fresh salty ice melt on the roads. We
refer to days like this as sloppy days in the Winter in Duluth. Everything
gets covered in a layer of a mix of salt and sand. It gets so bad some days
that it is hard to tell what color cars are. My Zero ride was during a mild
sloppy day for Duluth but it still produced pretty good results on my suit.

There were spots of salt all over my suit and Aerostich Dispatch Bag from
the rear tire of the Zero and passing cars throwing up road spray. The lower
legs of my suit took the brunt of the spray with a great coating of real
roadgrime. Finally some street cred!

Bruce also let me try his Aerostich Electric Warmbib. I was impressed with
how much heat it produced with very little bulk. I could wear it underneath
my Darien TLTec Wind Blocker Fleece Liner and still have plenty of room in
my Roadcrafter Classic. If my commute was double my current 7 miles I would
use the Warmbib on the colder days. I’m seriously thinking of keeping one in
my tank bag as insurance against unexpected cold weather any time of the
year. The Warmbib packs very small.

The Two Seasons: Winter and Road Construction
That is the saying in Duluth. We have two seasons, Winter and Road
Construction. Work has already begun filling pot holes that form in late
Winter and early Spring. I took a new route to Aerostich on 4th street as I
was getting bored with Superior St. 4th Street is in bad shape with a major
construction project happening this year. It was a very rough ride as I was
tossed in the air a few times as I rode over the “road” which looked like it
was deserted for decades. The unexpected fun in this ride was seeing the
surprised faces of our city road workers filling in the potholes. I was
stealthily right in front of them suddenly as they couldn’t hear me coming.
They looked up with a surprised look that quickly turned to a little grin
like, “Ok, you got me. Nice joke.”

The Zero would need suspension work to make it more suitable for cold
weather commuting. Roads in Duluth are well known for being in poor
condition as our infrastructure base previously supported over 100,000
people. Now at about 89,000 people we don’t have the tax base to support the
layout of our city as well as we would like. Duluth is an amazing city on
the edge of an inland sea with beauty that is world class. Come move here
and help us finance better roads!

My primary commuting motorcycle is a DR-650 Suzuki. Its long travel
suspension is ideal for soaking up the rough road surfaces. It rides better
than any 4 wheel vehicle no matter where I go in Duluth but I haven’t ridden
it in temperatures like this ride at 9°F. The standard fluid in the forks
and shock of the Zero gets too thick in the cold which results in a ride
that feels like there is almost no suspension. They make specialized
hydraulic fluid for aircraft that resists changes in viscosity caused by
temperature. It is expensive but would be worth a try in the Zero as only a
small quantity would be needed.


[Author: ] Randy - Aerostich I.T. & Data/Mail List Management. Rode about 7K
miles in 244 days in 2015. Commutes daily on either a ‘06 Suzuki DR650 or
‘89 Honda Hawk NT650.

Rider factoid: Road raced CRA, WERA competitively for 10 years. Rode across
Alaska and parts of South America in Argentina and Chile. Lifelong rider.
[© rideapart.com  RideApart]
...
https://www.aerostich.com/blog/zero-below-zero/
Zero Below Zero Blog
...
[video  dated
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zsAuu31uHk
ZeroBelowZero - Commute home, Friday, January 15, 2016
Aerostich  Jan 20, 2016
Will an electric motorcycle work for everyday transportation all winter long
in frozen Duluth Minnesota? We’re putting together a lightly winterized Zero
FX, and some brave (or foolish) volunteers to find out. Follow the project
blog at www.aerostich.com/zbz
]
...
https://www.google.com/search?q=EV-grin
EV-grin




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use: 
http://evdl.org/evln/


{brucedp.150m.com}

--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Zero-FX-e-Motorcycle-daily-driver-blog-in-freezing-Duluth-MN-v-tp4681087.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to