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It Looks Like a Kawasaki Electric Bike Is Moving Forward

New Patent Drawings Reveal Progress

It would seem that Kawasaki has an electric motorcycle it’s working on. Visordown nabbed some patent drawings that show how the bike is progressing. In short, Kawasaki’s getting closer. There are two drawings that show some interesting things about the bike.

The first shows a mostly complete motorcycle, or rather a simple drawing of one. It’s all there, what looks like a battery and electric motor, handlebars, etc. This suggests Kawasaki at least has a design in mind and is working towards patenting its ideas. 

Kawasaki electric bike patent
Images from Visordown

The second shows a close up of the gearing and clutch. Yep, this electric bike appears to have a clutch. Visordown notes that the addition of the gearbox could help the electric motor spin more efficiently, allowing the rider to get the most out of the battery power. the addition of a couple gears also would make the electric motorcycle feel a little more conventional and less like a twist-and-go scooter. 

The patent drawings are honestly pretty unclear. As Visordown notes, the information gleaned from the drawings could be incorrect. Kawasaki could just be patenting the designs for a future application. This would allow them to come back to it at a later date, or the manufacturer could be hiding something truly significant within the drawing that we didn’t notice. Either way, it shows that Kawasaki is working on something interesting.

The likelihood that its an electric motorcycle is pretty high. Kawasaki has had electric motorcycle concepts in the past (the J Concept comes to mind) and with electric bikes poised to become the future of the industry, it’s no wonder Kawasaki appears to be working on one.

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BikeExif electric motorcycle Huge Moto Other Motorcycle Blogs

Huge Moto x Zero: An electrifying new design language?

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
The One Moto Show is a cornucopia of analog delights, gleaming with metalflake and raw, hand-beaten bodywork. But there was an interloper lurking amongst the chrome and carburetors: this futuristic Zero from Huge Moto of San Francisco.

As soon as the Zero was revealed, it starting popping up everywhere on social media. So we dropped a line to Huge Moto’s boss, Bill Webb, to get the story on this surprise hit—and the very 21st century design process.

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
“Zero reached out to us a couple years ago, after you featured our ‘MONO RACR’ Honda CBR,” Bill told us. “We ended up working on some projects together, and hopefully some of our design influence will be seen on the next generation bikes.”

Then Bill asked Zero if Huge could build a custom bike as a side project. A 2018 FXS soon arrived, along with its CAD files.

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
The FXS is Zero’s entry-level model: a commuter bike with supermoto styling that costs just $10,495—a little less than a Sportster 1200 Custom. Range in the city is somewhere up to 100 miles (you can get models with a much larger range) and weight is a commendable 293 lb (133 kg).

Bill and his team slowly began to work on concepts for the custom. As the bike began to take shape in CAD, there was growing interest from Zero HQ in helping to finish the FXS and get a public reaction.

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
Brian Wiseman, Zero’s VP of product development, heard that the tire company Shinko was looking for a bike to display at The One Moto Show. So the famous Portland show became the target, and Huge fired up their computers.

“It’s far from the sexiness of welding and hammering away in a fabrication shop,” Bill says. “The Zero was mostly conceived sitting at a CAD workstation, after hours, and switching between hardcore 3D design and loose napkin-grade sketches.”

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
The design goal was to create a flow across the top of the bike, drawing eyes away from the electric components and frame, and focusing more attention and ‘visual weight’ on the front end.

“A design that feels futuristic, seamless and lightweight,” Bill adds. “Bruce Lee was our philosophical inspiration: Lean muscularity with agility and speed!”

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
The first basic design was fully detailed in CAD, machined out of ABS thermoplastic polymer, and then mocked up on the bike (above).

“Once we got the parts back, it was clear which aspects were working and which were not,” says Bill. The design was tweaked until every millimeter and every angle felt ‘right.’

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
It certainly looks good to us—and we see hints of the Husqvarna ‘Pilens around the ‘tank’ area too. (Maybe these ‘shoulders’ on tank covers will become the defining design aesthetic of the 2010s?)

Attention then switched to the lower frame section, below the bodywork. “The biggest challenge with electric drivetrains is the lack of visual interest,” says Bill.

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
“You’ve got big rectangular shapes and flat, unbroken surfaces don’t evoke the same feeling of an air-cooled cylinder head or clutch cover.”

New, dark-colored panels now flow with the upper body, and there’s a belly pan lower down—not only to protect the underside, but also to add more visual weight to the front of the bike.

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
The styling isn’t the only change to this FXS, though. You obviously can’t upgrade the carbs or fit a free-flowing exhaust system, and the brief forbade cutting into the frame.

So this FXS gets a fillip from a high-end Fox Racing shock, and new wheels all round: 17-inch Sun rims custom laced onto off-road hubs from the Zero FX. “I’d guess they are significantly lighter than standard,” says Bill. “They are made for racing, and the wheel builder specializes in supermoto bikes.”

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto
According to reviewers, the Zero FXS is a blast to ride. And although the bike looks perfectly acceptable in stock form, the new design work has lifted it to a whole other level.

“It’s a design that takes some of the ‘raw’ influences from gas bikes and mixes them with the seamlessness, solidity and cleanliness of electric,” says Bill. And we’d agree 100%.

Any chance of releasing this as a kit, chaps?

Huge Moto | Facebook | Instagram | Zero Motorcycles | Images by Aaron Brimhall

Custom Zero FXS electric motorcycle by Huge Moto

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BikeExif deBolex Engineering electric motorcycle Other Motorcycle Blogs TW Steel

DeBolex gives the Energica Eva a classic spin

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
A week ago, Ducati’s lead designer told Digital Trends that “Electrification will change bike design more than it will change car design.”

We’re not so sure of that. Motorcyclists are an inherently conservative bunch—especially older folks with the cash to splash on a new toy. We’d be happy if future electric motorcycles followed the lead of this amazing Energica, remodeled by England’s deBolex Engineering.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
The project was kickstarted by Gareth Maxwell Roberts, the director of the documentary film Oil in the Blood. The film champions analog values and traditional skills, but also has an eye on the future.

So when Gareth commissioned a build to celebrate the film’s release, he decided to merge these two ideals.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
Choosing Calum Pryce-Tidd and Des Francis of deBolex was a no-brainer: they’re traditional craftsmen, among the best in Europe, and have built bikes for Gareth in the past.

Gareth needed a partner on the build, so he reached out to TW Steel. The Dutch watchmaker has already commissioned customs for its Sons of Time program, and loved the idea of an electric special.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
After extensive research, Gareth and Calum found their base bike: the Eva, from the Energica Motor Company of Modena, Italy. Energica are deeply rooted in racing, and will be supplying the machines for the upcoming MotoE class in MotoGP this season.

The Eva is a full-bore streetfighter with the equivalent of 145 hp and 200 Nm, and a decent range of 125 miles. It’s insanely fast and handles well, making it the sort of bike deBolex could restyle without having to worry about improving the basics first.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
Paul d’Orléans of The Vintagent introduced the team to Energica’s CEO Stefano Benatti, who immediately saw potential. So Calum and Gareth visited the factory for a briefing by Energica’s chief technology officer Giampiero Testoni.

The factory sent a bike to England a week later—leaving just over two months before it had to be revealed. “I figured I’d be working 24/7 to finish the film,” Gareth says wryly, “so why couldn’t they share the pain to finish the bike?”

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
“The deadline was tight” says Calum. “And we didn’t know what we were up against—until the Energica was on the ramp and the panels were stripped off to leave a bare rolling chassis.”

The Eva turned out to be a pleasant surprise. deBolex just needed to relocate the ABS module and water pump, and adjust the rear subframe. With that out the way, they had a clean rolling chassis ready to accept bodywork.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
Calum and Des spent the next few days sketching out their ideas, before settling on a final design. They started hand shaping up the new bodywork from aluminum, using traditional coach-building techniques.

The Eva’s new body panels are designed to flow from front to back, visually slimming down the bike and giving it a more classic race vibe. The biggest design challenge with electric bikes is usually their bulky, square batteries—so Calum and Des worked to cover up the power cells, and expose more of the interesting motor instead.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
“Energica have done a really nice job of encasing the motor and battery in cast aluminum,” says Calum. “We feel it helps the bike look closer to a more traditional combustion engine.”

DeBolex did a stellar job of incorporating the Energica’s cooling system into the design, with lines that lead away from the water cooler, and follow through to the knee indents on the tank. And they made sure that there were enough vents to channel air where it needs to go.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
The power controller sits behind the new ‘tank’ cover, and the onboard charging unit under the tail. That part was a challenge, as it meant building a larger rear hump than the lads usually like to do. Still, they knocked it out the park.

Des covered the new seat in Alcantara; as with all deBolex builds, it pops off easily to make maintenance a breeze.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
DeBolex aren’t known for half-assing a project—so this racer’s packing a healthy upgrade list too. There’s a Maxton RT10 shock out back, and a set of forged aluminum Dymag UP7X wheels, wrapped in Pirelli Diablo Supercorsa road-and-track tires.

The brakes have been upgraded too, with Brembo calipers and discs, plus a Magura master cylinder. The rear sets, brake reservoir and bar ends are from Rizoma, and the grips are from Renthal. DeBolex also used Pro-Bolt fasteners throughout the build.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
With a week to deadline, Calum and Des wrapped up fabrication and started prepping for paint. After a few hours of discussion, they settled on this supremely classy mix of greys, silver and white. (The final paint was done in-house, as is the norm for deBolex.)

The Energica Eva was finally buttoned up at 6 am, on the morning of the Oil in the Blood premiere in London, and revealed in the evening alongside a limited edition TW Steel timepiece.

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
“The entire process knitted together perfectly,” says Gareth. “All our interests were aligned, which gave Calum the resources to create a great custom bike for the future.”

“It captures the spirit of Oil In The Blood too,” he adds. “With the possibilities of an electric powertrain, the potential of an Energica motorcycle, and the ethos of TW Steel.”

Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering
Sounds like a match made in heaven. We’ll let Calum and Des get some sleep while we spend the next few days fawning over their incredible work.

deBolex Engineering | Facebook | Instagram | Photography by Tom Horna of Autohouse London
Custom Energica Eva electric motorcycle by deBolex Engineering

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Lightning Motorcycles Teases Strike’s Riding Position

It’s a Bit More Upright

If you were worried that the Lightning Motorcycles Strike was going to have the same super-hunched riding position that the superbike has, then you can breathe easy. It will have a more upright riding position than the company’s LS-218.

This is good news. While the LS-218’s riding position is right for that particular bike, the mainstream Strike that Lightning Motorcycles will put out should be a little more relaxed so it can be used as an everyday bike. We’re not talking full cruiser status here, but something sporty but more upright.

Judging by an image that Lightning Motorcycles teased, the bike will have what looks like a very comfortable yet sporty riding position. In a release by the company, it said, “Strike is a motorcycle engineered for the track, but designed for the street.” 

To me that says it’ll be a sportbike with a comfortable riding position and strong performance. In my mind, this is exactly what I hoped the bike would be. A hardcore electric sportbike for the street doesn’t make sense. Lightning Motorcycles already has the LS-218, and the Strike should be more of a mainstream machine. According to the image above it will be. As you can easily see, the rider sits more upright, putting less weight on wrists and arms. This is more comfortable for longer rides and everyday commuting. 

This is yet another bit of information that bodes well for the Strike. If the company can deliver on its performance numbers and keep the price set at about $13,000, then it should put just about all other electric motorcycles to shame. 

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Electric electric bike electric motorcycle Gear Reviews Moped Motorcycle News ONYX Motorbikes Other Motorcycle Blogs Web Bike World

Are These Onyx Electric Mopeds the Perfect Urban Commuter Bikes?

Pedals and Electric Power

Mopeds were popular machines in the 1970s and 80s, but over time the bicycle/motorcycle bike fell out of style. Now, they’re quite uncommon. You see either scooters or motorcycles, but the pedal moped is a rarity on the road. That may change in the future thanks to ONYX Motorbikes.

ONYX Motorbikes got its start where many good ideas go, Indigogo. After raising about $1 million, Tim Seward, the founder of the company, and his team have delivered on some truly attractive little electric bikes. According to electrek, the company recently started delivering bikes to customers.

The company has two models: the RCR and CTY. Both keep with the classic Moped aesthetic but add in modern technology like regenerative braking. They charge via a regular wall outlet. They both feature pedals like the good mopeds of old in case you run out of battery juice.

ONYX CTY moped
Image from ONYX

If you’re looking for a bike that’s similar in performance to the mopeds of old, then the CTY is for you. As the name implies, it’s built for low-speed commuting duties. It features a 2.5-kilowatt motor (3.35 horsepower) and a removable 48-volt 768-watt-hour battery. It has a top speed of about 30 mph and a range of 40 miles if you cruise at 20 mph. If you’re going flat out all the time, expect about 25 miles to a charge. Recharging the battery takes about two hours.

ONYX RCR Moped
Image from ONYX

The RCR packs a bit more of a punch. It can travel up to 60 mph and go 75 miles if you cruise at 20 mph. Obviously, if you’re going faster than that all the time, you’re looking at about half that amount of range. The bike can do this thanks to its power powerful 5.4-kilowatt motor (7.2 horsepower), and its 72-volt 23-amp-hour battery. Recharging the battery takes about four hours.

While that might not seem like crazy performance numbers, they are super reasonably priced. The CTY costs $2,500 (though it is sold out for 2019), and the RCR costs $3,500, according to the company’s website. electrek noted a sale going on right now, which means you can get the RCR for $3,250. I’m a sucker for mopeds (I own a 1987 Tomos Golden Bullet), but now I’m thinking of trading up.

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Harley-Davidson Shows Off Its Electric Concepts In Action

Harley Looking Ahead

Harley-Davidson made a big effort towards the future with its new LiveWire. However, that bike hasn’t been very well received. Most people aren’t impressed with the range or price. Basically, $30k is a lot to ask for a motorcycle that only goes about 100 miles per charge. Harley showed off two other bikes when it debuted the LiveWire. Two smaller concepts and now there’s video

At the X Games in Aspen, Colorado, the company brought its two small concepts along and let some of the X Games folks ride them. The resulting videos are little more than advertisements for the company with a celebrity in the saddle.

Still, it gives you a look at what the little electric bikes are capable of. Oddly, Harley only posted one of the videos to its YouTube channel so far, so we only have one of them to show you, but you can head over to Harley’s website to check out the other one.

Between the two unnamed electric concept bikes, I have to say the urban scooter thing is the weirder of the two. The other bike is pretty much a mashup of an electric mountain bike and a dirtbike. It makes sense to me, and I think Harley could actually sell it if it targeted the market right.

Harley-Davidson Concept
Image from Harley-Davidson

The scooter-looking bike is kind of cool, but I’d be more inclined to buy a Vespa Electtrica than the weird Harley creation. If the LiveWire’s price is any indication of where these things will hit the market, I bet Harley’s scooter bike would be pretty pricey, and I’d almost rather have the trusted Vespa name carting me around city streets.

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Ducati electric motorcycle Gear Reviews Motorcycle News Other Motorcycle Blogs Web Bike World

Ducati’s Future Is Electric

An Electric Italian Stallion Is Coming

Electric motorcycles are starting to really come into their own. I made a prediction that 2019 would be a breakout year for electric bikes. It’s shaping up to be true. Ducati is in the game.

At a Motostudent event in Spain, Claudio Domenicali, Ducati’s CEO, said “The future is electric, we’re not far from starting series production.”

The Italian publication Corsedimoto, reported Domenicali saying the quote above. It has everyone wondering what Ducati’s electric bike will be. Ducati has yet to release any information on an upcoming electric bike, but it’s clear Ducati will not only build electric motorcycles but sees it as the future for the brand.

Seeing as how VW Group ownsDucati and that company’s next serious large-scale initiative is electrification, this comes as little surprise.

No Stranger to Electric Bikes

As electrek points out, Ducati has experience with electric bikes. It has partnered with companies to make electric bicycles and it worked with Milan Polytechnic School of Design developing an electric concept bike called the Ducati Zero. The company’s CEO was also spotted riding a Ducati Hypermotard that had a Zero FX powertrain.

With all that in mind, it’s clear that the Italian motorcycle manufacturer has electric bikes on the brain. It comes at the right time, too. Harley-Davidson revealed the LiveWire, Lightning Motorcycles just announced a new model, and the world seems full of electric motorcycle startups.

Ducati positioned itself wel to take advantage of the EV market. It has VW Group technology to pull from. Many riders see Ducati as a premium motorcycle manufacturer. I would expect people to balk less at a high-priced electric Ducati than they would, say, the Harley LiveWire.

That doesn’t mean I think Ducati should put out a $30,000 electric motorcycle. However, the company could probably charge a little more than the competition and get away with it.

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electric motorcycle Gear Reviews Lightning Motorcycles Lightning Strike Motorcycle News Other Motorcycle Blogs Strike Web Bike World

Lightning Motorcycles Teases Its Second Model, the Lightning Strike

A New Electric Motorcycle for the Masses

While the LS-218 electric motorcycle from Lighting Motorcycles is a high-dollar item designed for high-speed racing, the company’s second bike should be more pedestrian. The company just released a teaser for its new motorcycle called the Lighting Strike

Lightning Motorcycles claims its new bike will “shock the industry in every dimension.” It shared only a few stats for the motorcycle and didn’t give us a full look just a couple of headlights. According to the company’s teaser, the new bike can reach 150 mph. It also has a range of 150 miles. Most importantly, you can recharge the battery in 35 minutes thanks to DC fast charging.

The best part of Lightning Motorcycle’s new bike? The price. The company says its new model will cost $12,998. With a starting price that low, Harley-Davidson must feel pretty silly. Harley wants to shill out the LiveWire for $30k and it only achieves about 100 miles per charge.

The Strike, as Lightning Motorcycles calls it, will launch in March of 2019. At that time, the company will have an official reveal. When that happens Lightning will show us all the little details that are omitted currently.

By the look of the teaser image, the bike will be a sportbike. The headlights give it away. Also, the company has experience with sportbikes. The LS-218 is a superbike that’s set land-speed records. It is, by all accounts, a crazy, electric machine. Hopefully, the new Strike motorcycle will be almost as impressive if not as impressive as the LS-218 Superbike.

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NOVUS Shows Off It’s Electric Carbon Motorcycle

Making the Harley LiveWire Look Inexpensive

NOVUS, a German electric motorcycle company, revealed its new electric motorcycle at the Consumer Electronics Show. While there’s plenty of stuff to talk about, let’s hit the big thing first. It costs a whopping $39,500. If you thought Harley’s LiveWire was expensive … well, okay it still is.

Forget the price for a moment and the NOVUS machine is actually pretty impressive. It features a sleek and artfully crafted carbon monocoque frame. This lightweight frame acts as the structure and the body for the bike. It gives it a futuristic but attractive look. The rest of the bike is mostly made of carbon fiber, too, including the front fork and rear swingarm.

NOVUS electric motorcycle
Image from NOVUS

The specs are equally impressive. The bike has a direct-drive rear hub electric motor that puts out 148 lb-ft of torque. Because the bike weighs a superlight 85 pounds, it should be able to get to its top speed of 60 mph rather quickly. 

Feeding that electric hub motor is a somewhat less impressive 14.4 kW hour battery. The battery can get the bike roughly 60 miles before its juice peters out.

Stupid Expensive

This is a bike for rich folks looking for a cool electric toy. It’s attractive and interesting, but it’s not a transportation solution for the vast majority of riders.

Many people were disappointed with the Harley LiveWire’s price and range. This bike is even more absurd in those respects. However, people weren’t expecting much from a motorcycle company they never even heard of, so this bike will avoid most of the harshest complaints.

NOVUS electric motorcycle
Image from NOVUS

Electric motorcycles have to get affordable and have better range before they’ll be viable transportation options. This is especially true in the U.S. The NOVUS bike is interesting. The carbon frame is cool. The bike looks great, but it’s more of a fancy science experiment than anything.

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Cake Hopes to Sell 70,000 of its Electric Motorcycle Annually

An Off-Road Electric Motorcycle and a Commuter?

Electric motorcycles provide zero emissions, instant torque, and plenty of opportunities from a design standpoint. Cake’s electric motorcycle is one of the more interesting out there. The bike targets off-road riders, but the CEO of Cake also sees it as the future of commuting.

Stefan Ytterborn, Cake’s CEO sat down with Cycle World to discuss his company and where he’d like it to go. During this conversation, he said he’d like to see his company sell 70,000 models annually. That number is based on a 10-year plan that Ytterborn worked on with his two sons.

“To pursue everything we have planned, we will need to finance the business by about $25 million until 2022,” he told Cycle World. “So far, we’ve raised $7 million.”

Electric Power for the Future

Cake’s electric motorcycle is a unique, dirtbike-looking thing. The company built the bike for light off-road use. It looks to me like a cross between a mountain bike and a real dirtbike. While the business is focused on the off-road portion of the market right now, Ytterborn talked a lot about the bike being used as a commuter vehicle in the future.

“The electric drivetrain suits a light, snappy vehicle,” he said. “The lion’s share of our business is going to be off-road inspired, but every model that we introduce will become a commuter bike as well.”

Going after off-road enthusiasts first is an interesting idea. It’s so vastly different from most other electric motorcycle manufacturers who focus on making a commuter bike first. It’s an interesting approach and one that I hope works for the company.

Cake Kalk electric bike charging
Image from Cake

If they can build up a customer base of people riding these off-road. it makes sense that they’d be able to make the transition to the street.

The Cake Kalk, the production version of the bike, is made in Taiwan and the drivetrain of the motorcycle is made in Europe. The Cake team designed it from the ground up. It has a top speed of about 45 mph and a range of up to about 50 miles. The motor is a range 7-15 kW mid motor and the battery is a 2.6kWh lithium ion. There are three ride modes and adjustable motor braking.

That sounds like it could be a fun toy or a useful commuting machine, depending on how far or fast you need to go. However, I see Cake’s machine needing a little more juice to truly entice most riders.

Cake Kalk electric motorcycle getting some air
Image from Cake
Cake Kalk doing a wheelie
Image from Cake
Cake Kalk electric motorcycle rear view
Image from Cake

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