Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 19

Thread: Wanna Ride Weird??

  1. #1
    Join Date
    3rd March 2004 - 22:43
    Bike
    Guzzi
    Location
    In Paradise
    Posts
    2,490

    Wanna Ride Weird??

    Seem to recall saying something that electric motorcycles will not take off. Seems I may have to eat humble pie.
    Go too http://motorcyclecity.com/electric-hybrid/ecycle.htm

    There are some strange babies here. Not for me but maybe the day might come when we are riding the past.

    Skyryder

  2. #2
    Join Date
    25th April 2003 - 11:00
    Bike
    Suzuki DR650
    Location
    City of sails
    Posts
    4,040
    I reckon my bike is lacking noise as it is, so you can keep thoes quiet electric bikes outa my way!

    I wish I had a yoshi full system


  3. #3
    Join Date
    29th September 2003 - 12:00
    Bike
    ZR750 Kawasaki
    Location
    Waiuku
    Posts
    1,946
    Nope not for me,I ride weird enough as it is.
    I'm waiting for Kawasaki's KLX650 diesil to get here.
    Interesting but.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    1st March 2005 - 14:45
    Bike
    Assorted dinosaurs
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    718
    Blog Entries
    27

    electric bikes

    Why the hell are most of those bikes in the hyperlink so fuggin ugly?

    Just because they have a different engine design doesnt mean that the bikes styling has to be 'different" [read fugginugly] cause one of the reasons I buy a bike is for the looks

    Show me a cool looking electric bike & sometime in the future I may be more interested in buying one
    ITS NOT GETTING WHAT YOU WANT,BUT WANTING WHAT YOUVE GOT
    https://hondacx500custombuild.blogspot.com/?m=1

  5. #5
    Join Date
    26th February 2005 - 15:10
    Bike
    Ubrfarter V Klunkn,ffwabbit,Petal,phoebe
    Location
    In the cave of Adullam
    Posts
    13,624
    Quote Originally Posted by Skyryder
    Seem to recall saying something that electric motorcycles will not take off. Seems I may have to eat humble pie.
    Go too http://motorcyclecity.com/electric-hybrid/ecycle.htm

    There are some strange babies here. Not for me but maybe the day might come when we are riding the past.

    Skyryder
    Hm. D'you believe that weight figure of 105kg. For a 200 cc diesel PLUS that honky electric motor. ?

    I wonder what the handling is like with that electric rotor spinning around at some very high speed ?
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  6. #6
    Join Date
    7th November 2004 - 11:00
    Bike
    Aquired by locals
    Location
    Groote Eylandt
    Posts
    6,606
    Dont put me forward for one of those. Whats with the camel hump tank?
    To every man upon this earth
    Death cometh sooner or late
    And how can a man die better
    Than facing fearful odds
    For the ashes of his fathers
    And the temples of his Gods

  7. #7
    Join Date
    24th January 2005 - 15:45
    Bike
    2022 Suzuki GSX250R
    Location
    Manawatu
    Posts
    2,209
    I'd happily have an electric motorbike for commuting on a daily basis - cost fuck all to run, charge it up at night.

    Until such time as fuel cell technology comes down in price (and weight and size) and the problem of where are we going to get the hydrogen (electrolyse from water? - need to generate the electricity to do that) is solved, electric vehicles will have limited scope. Even though modern deep cycle batteries are smaller and lighter than their predecessors, they're still heavy and bulky and take a while to charge, leaving commuting as about the only practical use for EVs so far.

    That being said EV cars have been made in amateur's garages, FFS, that can exceed 116km/h and have a 50km range - think of the number of people who live within 25km of their work (most of whom are within a 50km/h zone) and imagine all of them driving/riding to work in/on an electric car/bike.

    Certainly cut the petrol consumption down a lot - meaniing that they could continue driving or riding their petrol-fueled vehicle on longer journeys for a lot more years - certainly more than they'd have if they continue driving their fucking cages for five minutes when they could walk there in 20 minutes.

    The GSX250 I'm currently trying to get running properly was donated to me to be used as the core of my own DIY EV project - I was going to get motor, controller, batteries etc and build my own electric bike - based around an '82 GSX250 frame.

    Personally, If I had my dream bike - BMW R100 for those who're new here - I would not be riding it to work. I would ride a smaller, more economical bike for my daily commute and save the Beemer for the weekends and holidays when I can take it out on the open road and have a proper ride.

    If I had said beemer, would it matter to me if the commuting bike was an electric bike rather than, say, a little 125 or 250 japper? Weeellllll - electric bikes don't use gas, which means... all the more petrol for the Beemer!

    I think eventually we (as a species) are going to have to change our means of fueling our vehicles - be it ethanol or some synthetic "petrol" for internal combustion engines or hydrogen-fuel-cell-powered electric vehicles, eventually we are going to run out of fossil fuels and emission controls are going to dictate cleaner alternatives. For that reason, I keep a close eye on advances in alternative fuels and EVs.

    I am not going to give up riding a bike - so it is important for me to know that whatever means they come up with for powering cars is going to be practical for powering bikes also. I'l hate to think that the system they come up with will be so bulky and heavy it won't fit in/onto a bike frame.

    Mega-fuggenugly some of those bikes might be, but they're at least a sign that someone, somewhere, is working to ensure that, whatever happens to the fossil fuels, WE WON'T MISS OUT!

    Electric does not mean "weak" or second best - anyone here who disagrees with me is quite welcome to state their case after they've sat on the tracks in front of the Paraparaumu-Wellington "Unit"...

    Some of those bikes on that site have great top speeds and acceleration - and they're lugging 'round a pile of batteries! Imagine what would be achievable with a lighter, more efficient, power supply - such as will be available in years to come.
    Motorbike Camping for the win!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    8th August 2004 - 17:16
    Bike
    1999 GSXR1100W, 1975 CT90
    Location
    Upper Hutt
    Posts
    5,551
    An electric bike would be interesting. On/off motor should be fun

    Might be interested in this, an electric R1 1/5 scale though
    http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin...?&I=LXBEP3&P=0

  9. #9
    Join Date
    8th August 2004 - 17:16
    Bike
    1999 GSXR1100W, 1975 CT90
    Location
    Upper Hutt
    Posts
    5,551
    Quote Originally Posted by alarumba
    Might be interested in this, an electric R1 1/5 scale though
    http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin...?&I=LXBEP3&P=0
    And here's a reveiw on it

    I want it

  10. #10
    Join Date
    8th August 2004 - 17:16
    Bike
    1999 GSXR1100W, 1975 CT90
    Location
    Upper Hutt
    Posts
    5,551

  11. #11
    Join Date
    24th January 2005 - 15:45
    Bike
    2022 Suzuki GSX250R
    Location
    Manawatu
    Posts
    2,209
    Quote Originally Posted by alarumba
    And here's a reveiw on it

    I want it
    I can just see you on it, fording the majestic Bugadivyno River as you commute from Waikikamukau to Erewhon...
    Motorbike Camping for the win!

  12. #12
    Join Date
    8th August 2004 - 12:00
    Bike
    Arse Bandit
    Location
    AKL
    Posts
    1,437
    Wah! Running out of petrol scares me.

    I mean, what about passenger planes?!

  13. #13
    Join Date
    24th January 2005 - 15:45
    Bike
    2022 Suzuki GSX250R
    Location
    Manawatu
    Posts
    2,209
    Quote Originally Posted by Spleen
    Wah! Running out of petrol scares me.

    I mean, what about passenger planes?!
    Jet liners run on kerosene, smaller IC-engine powered prop jobs like Cesnas run on Avgas.

    The problem is not running out of petrol, it's running out of crude oil - whence we get petrol, diesel and kerosene as well as napthas (solvents), lubricating oils, asphalt and shit-loads of other things that we use.

    You could probably synthesise most the stuff in petrol - it's only carbon chemistry, after all - given appropriate plants and a supply of raw carbon-based ingredients but the problem would be the cost of manufacture. Petrol is dear enough when you're just distilling crude oils (and you get lots of useful side products such as diesel and kerosene), imagine how bad it would be if they had to synthesise the carbon chains from simpler chemicals - and they'd have to synthesise the kerosene and napthas as well (vege oils have been used as substitutes for diesel so we'll ignore that). A fully synthesised petrol would be horrendously expensive.

    I've read a New Zealand book that went into home-brewing alcohol fuel - setting up your engine, brewing and storing the fuel, legal requirements at the time (back when distilling alcohol for drinking was illegal) very interesting book.

    There are a few issues with alcohol - starting on cold mornings is one, sux to run on ethanol if you live in Canterbury or Waiuru - and a lot of people would find it a tad underpowered even with a properly configured engine.

    Electricity, however, delivers a serious amount of power and responsiveness - if you can get around the weight and range issues - smaller, ligher fuel cells and a means of delivering the hydrogen (such as Chrysler's "Natrium" system which uses stable, non-flammable Sodium Borohydride to supply the hydrogen on demand).

    Once we run out of crude oil, we will be stuffed in several different ways unless we have already found alternatives (concrete roads, anyone? - we won't have any more asphalt) to the multitude of products we get from crude oil.

    I'm glad there are people around the world working on the solutions now, refining them, improving the technology - do we really want to take a massive leap backwards when we finally run out of petrochemicals? Didn't think so. What we have now, in the way of electric vehicles, batteries and fuel cells, is very crude - but better we have that now, and improve over the next few years, than have only that a few years down the track when the arse falls out of the petrochemical industries.

    Personally I think we should already have had better fuel cells by now - we could have been running efficient fuel-cell electric vehicles years ago if they'd bothered developing them sooner - fuel cells were invented in 1839 - no that's not a typo - by William Grove. Even if they spent a hundred years on developing them, we could have been using fuel cell powered vehicles in 1939 instead of petrol. Instead, the year is 2005 and fuel cells are still heavy and bulky.
    Motorbike Camping for the win!

  14. #14
    Join Date
    4th October 2004 - 10:58
    Bike
    91 RGV 250
    Location
    www.farmtalk.co.nz
    Posts
    209
    Had an interesting review on the toyota prius on top gear last night. This is pretty much the only hybrid vehicle that has really made it, I see these things driving around every day and it seems like such a good idea.

    Problem is I see us running out of oil then banning all internal combustion engines as opposed to developing these vehicles in to mainstream to prolong our limited supply of crude oil which can be freely used for motorsport and other stuff, make it more expensive I guess
    Farmers.... www.farmtalk.co.nz

  15. #15
    Join Date
    24th January 2005 - 15:45
    Bike
    2022 Suzuki GSX250R
    Location
    Manawatu
    Posts
    2,209
    Quote Originally Posted by ktulu
    Problem is I see us running out of oil then banning all internal combustion engines as opposed to developing these vehicles in to mainstream to prolong our limited supply of crude oil which can be freely used for motorsport and other stuff, make it more expensive I guess
    Your point is well made - we should have had a lot of this stuff developed ages ago and be using it now to prolong the petrochemicals we have - rather than running out and saying "Oops, shit, well we have to go for electric or alcohol (or alcohol/electric hybrids) now - sorry that the current tech is not up to what you were used to with the super-powerful IC-powered cars. Never mind, it'd be back to normal in twenty or so years..."

    Fact: petrochemicals will eventually run out - and the number of vehicles on the roads is increasing, new markets are opening up. The increase in vehicles will only increase the rate at which we run out of petrochemicals unless something is done to counter it - such as using battery-powered electrics to commute and hybrid vehicles on longer journeys (or even using hybrids and pure electrics for around town and leaving the gas guzzler in the shed for long trips)

    Now is the time we should be doing this - since we weren't doing it much up til now. All power to Jerry Halstead and others like him who have built their own back-yard electric conversions and used them to commute - saving the petrol for longer trips.
    Motorbike Camping for the win!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •