Tag Archives: electric scooter

Yamaha unveils battery swap electric scooter

Battery swap technology has received a boost with Yamaha unveiling their EC-05 electric scooter with Gogoro lithium-ion battery packs you can easily swap at a convenient roadside vending machine.

The Yamaha scooter is a partnership with Taiwanese scooter company Gogoro Global.

Taiwan seems to be the epicentre of swappable battery tech with Kymco last year releasing their Ionex electric scooter with similar-sized battery packs.

Kymco proposes battery swap scheme for Ionex electric scooter hybrid smart desert electric vehicle
Kymco Ionex battery swap vending machines

Old battery swap tech

Battery swap technology is not new. In 1938, British company Battery Traction Ltd came up with the idea, but it was sidelined by World War II.

Better Place also suggested the idea for cars in 2008 and went broke in 2013.

Kymco proposes battery swap scheme
Better Place battery switch station in Israel

Several car companies have also dabbled with the idea, but canned it because their batteries are too big.

However, Tesla has patented a robot that can charge an electric car’s battery in 15 minutes and some small electric city cars can swap batteries in under a minute.

Now it seems battery swap technology is back on the drawing board, at least for motorcycles and scooters where the batteries are small and light enough for a rider to carry.

Yamaha Gogoro battery swap electric scooter
Gogoro battery swap vending machine

Yamaha was also recently believed to be co-operating with the other Japanese motorcycle manufacturers to standardise electric motorcycle and scooter technology, including charging infrastructure and swappable battery packs.

Yamaha EC-05Yamaha Gogoro battery swap electric scooter

In the case of the Yamaha EC-05 and Kymco Ionex, they fit two lithium-ion batteries about the size of half a briefcase.

There is no technical information on their weight, but the images suggest they are not that heavy as they are carried by a skinny young woman.

They even have a similar handle on top and can be bought from convenient roadside vending machines or charged at home.

Yamaha hopes to start delivering their scooters from August but initially only in Taiwan where there are already more than 1000 battery swap vending machines.Yamaha Gogoro battery swap electric scooter

It will only be a matter of time before they are available in other countries. Gogoro already sells its electric scooters in Europe.

Meanwhile, Yamaha is developing its own electric motorcycles and scooters as recent patent drawings show.

Will Yamaha put electric spark in R1? swap
Yamaha electric sportsbike patent drawings

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

KTM plans to make electric motorbikes in India

KTM has been in no hurry to get into electric motorbikes with only the Freeride E (pictured above) in production since 2015.

However, that could soon change with the Austrian motorcycle manufacturer combining with Indian vehicle manufacturer Bajaj Auto to develop a common 48-volt platform for electric two-wheelers.

They won’t be big road motorcycles, but scooters and mopeds with power from just 3kW to 10kW with production to begin in Pune by 2022.

In 2015, KTM decided to shelve plans to go into production with their Speed-E electric concept scooter.

Now that could be brought back with this new Baja venture.

KTM E-SPEED electric scooter
KTM E-SPEED electric scooter

Electric motorbikes?

It is not the first joint project with Bajaj as they already produce several KTM and Husqvarna motorcycles for the world market.

KTM Industries AG holds almost 52% of KTM AG and Bajaj has the remaining holding.

KTM global product marketing manager Diego Arioli said they would not get into electric motorbikes until they had a “decent range”.

electric scooter
KTM E-SPEED electric scooter

Diego says if they had kicked off their EV program with big electric motorbikes, customers would expect more range.

“We don’t want to stretch the technology now but as soon as it is right for what they need we will be ready for the market,” he said.

“It also has to fit into our ‘Ready to Race’ motto.”

KTM Freeride SM
KTM Freeride

The Freeride is not imported to Australia and has had limited success in Europe.

There are two versions of the Freeride E, the SX racer and the road-legal XC aimed at commuters and learners.

Prices are €10,995 for the SX (about $14,100) and €11,295 for the XC (about $14,500).

The Freeride E weighs only 104kg and features both brakes on the handlebars like a bicycle as there is no clutch lever.

The company hopes those controls will be familiar to cyclists who it hopes to win over for commuting.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

‘Ducati’ electric scooter for $5000

A Ducati-branded Chinese-made electric scooter will be imported by Perth-based company Vmoto through Urban Moto Imports, arriving in July at about $5000.

When we announced the Italian manufacturer had signed the unusual deal to allow Chinese Super Soco electric scooters to carry their brand, Ducati Australia said they would not be sold here.Ducati Super SOCO electric scooters

They also emphasised that the scooters were not a Ducati product, but “an electric scooter that wears Ducati’s colours, no more than that under a licensing agreement”.

However, it now appears that they will be sold here in a partnership between Urban Moto Imports and Vmoto.

The fully electric moped is based on the Super SOCO CUx model with special edition sporting Ducati livery. Ducati Super SOCO electric scooters

$5000 ‘Ducati’

Ducati Racing will also use the Super SOCO full electric range of motorcycles and scooters as their preferred “paddock transport” throughout the 2019 MotoGP series.

Super SOCO Spokesman Andy Fenwick says the special Ducati version of the CUx moped would help “add even more credibility to the SOCO range”. 

Urban Moto Imports CEO Joseph Elasmar confirms the Special Edition CUx Ducati will be available through the Super SOCO dealer network with pre-orders soon.

“We are expect pricing to be set around $5000,” he says.

Super Soco CUx

The Super Soco CUx scooter is available with four removable battery options for range of 60km to 120km from the 2700 watt maximum Bosch electric motor.

It also features a HD front camera with night vision and a G-force sensor that automatically activates the camera and sends video to a mobile phone in the event of a crash.

Other features include a high resolution dashboard, LED headlight, USB dock and smartphone connectivity that allows the rider to check the battery status.

Specifications

Brand Super Soco
Model CU
Speed 25 and 45km/h
Power 2.7kW (3.6 hp)
Weight 70 kg

The Ducati edition may vary in specification and features.

Electric noiseDucati electric mountain bike plug

The deal shows that Ducati is not shrinking away from the coming electric two-wheel revolution.

Ducati has been making noises about scooters and electrics over the past few years and has licensed two electric projects to other companies.

In 2015, there was the e-Scrambler painted in Scrambler Urban Enduro colours. It was made under licence to Ducati by Italwin, an Italian company specialising in pedal-assisted electric bicycles.

In 2017, Ducati Western Europe managing director Edouard Lotthe said they were looking at both scooters and electrics, while VW Group Chairman Matthias Mueller said Ducati would have an electric motorcycle by 2020.

In the same year the Ducati Zero futuristic design concept was produced by the Milano Scuola Politecnica di Design (Design Polytechnic School).

In 2018, Ducati unveiled its first electric mountain bike, the MIG-RR.

Ducati MIG-RR electric scooters mountain bike
Ducati electric mountain bike
And this year Ducati boss Claudio Domenicali admitted he rides a Hypermotard converted to electric power with a Zero FX powertrain and said the company is about to join the electric bike race.

“The future is electric, we’re not far from starting series production,” he said.

So there could be more electrics from Ducati soon, rather than just a licensing agreement for luxury scooters.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

India plans electric motorcycle incentives

India looks set to move most of its motorcycle and scooter production and sales to electric with government incentives over the next six to eight years.

The proposal was chaired by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi who has been re-elected with more than 63% of the vote.

Election promises

Similarly, the recent Australian election campaign heard that the Coalition believes electric vehicles will make up 25-50% of new passenger vehicles by 2030, while Labor wanted a target of 50% and the Greens called for 100%.

Those targets are largely out of our hands as we no longer have a car industry.

Australian vehicle imports will be determined by foreign manufacturers who will probably reach those targets anyway. For example, Sweden will not be making any internal combustion vehicles by 2030.

But the electrification of India’s vehicle manufacturing industry is a far more significant move for the world.

India is one of the biggest automobile manufacturers in the world, producing 4.6 millions cars last year.

It is also the biggest motorcycle and scooter market in the world with more than 21m sales a year.

Over the past two years sales of electric scooters in India more than doubled from 54,800 to 126,000, but it’s still only a small fraction of total sales.

Indian motorcycle companies Hero Electric, Ather Energy, Emflux, Twenty Two Motors and Okinawa produce electric scooters and motorcycles.

Emflux ONE electric motorcycle
Emflux ONE electric motorcycle

Electric incentives

Prime Minister Modi had previously said all new cars and utility vehicles manufactured in the country would be electric by 2030, but he backed down after an industry backlash.

However, with his resounding victory at the polls he is expected to wind up his electric plan, particularly for powered two- and three-wheelers.

His draft plan recommends $1.4 billion in incentives for the manufacture and sale of electric motorbikes and scooters while penalising petrol-powered bikes.

Harley-Davidson Livewire electric motorcycle specs incentives
LiveWire

It will be interesting to see if Harley-Davidson, who make their Street models in India, will also receive government incentives to produce and/or sell their upcoming LiveWire in India.

That would be interesting since Trump and Modi have been at loggerheads over tariffs for Harley bikes.

MotorbikeWriter will attend the world launch of the LiveWire in Portland, Oregon, in July. Stay tuned for our road test.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Are Ducati-branded electric scooters coming?

The only thing Ducati about these Chinese-made Super SOCO CUx electric scooters is the name and logo.

Perth-based Vmoto who manufacturers in China has somehow obtained a licence agreement with the Italian manufacturer to make the luxury electric scooters under the Ducati brand.

The agreement was signed a couple of weeks ago, but it us still unclear where the scooters will be sold.

Apparently the scooters will be used as pit vehicles by the Ducati MotoGP team, but whether they will be available or sale anywhere outside of South East Asia remains a mystery.Ducati Super SOCO electric scooters

We tried to contact  Vmoto for comment and received this email reply from Super SOCO importer Urban Moto Imports:

We are still working through the processes and complexities that have arisen, and a press release is expected to be circulated in the coming days, which will explain what will happen in the future regarding these scooters.

Vmoto originally said the Ducati/Vmoto scooter would be marketed as a “high-end luxury product at a premium price” and sold globally over the next two years through the “existing worldwide distribution network”.

Meanwhile, Ducati Australia says they will not be sold here.Ducati Super SOCO electric scooters

They emphasise that the scooters are not a Ducati product, but “an electric scooter that wears Ducati’s colours, no more than that under a licensing agreement”.

However, the deal does show that Ducati is not shrinking away from the coming electric two-wheel revolution.

Electric noiseDucati electric mountain bike plug

Ducati has been making noises about scooters and electrics over the past few years and has licensed two electric projects to other companies.

In 2015, there was the e-Scrambler painted in Scrambler Urban Enduro colours. It was made under licence to Ducati by Italwin, an Italian company specialising in pedal-assisted electric bicycles.

In 2017, Ducati Western Europe managing director Edouard Lotthe said they were looking at both scooters and electrics, while VW Group Chairman Matthias Mueller said Ducati would have an electric motorcycle by 2020.

In the same year the Ducati Zero futuristic design concept was produced by the Milano Scuola Politecnica di Design (Design Polytechnic School).

In 2018, Ducati unveiled its first electric mountain bike, the MIG-RR.

Ducati MIG-RR electric scooters mountain bike
Ducati MIG-RR electric mountain bike

And this year Ducati boss Claudio Domenicali admitted he rides a Hypermotard converted to electric power with a Zero FX powertrain and said the company is about to join the electric bike race.

“The future is electric, we’re not far from starting series production,” he said.

So there could be more electrics from Ducati soon, rather than just a licensing agreement for luxury scooters.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ducati signs deal for electric scooters

Whoever thought they would hear the words “Ducati” and “electric scooters” in the same sentence?

But now it seems Chinese manufacturer Vmoto has signed a licence agreement with the Italian manufacturer to make luxury electric scooters under the Ducati brand.

They will be sold worldwide through current distribution networks, so they could be coming here.

Electric noiseDucati electric mountain bike plug

Ducati has been making noises about scooters and electrics over the past few years and has licensed two electric projects to other companies.

In 2015, there was the e-Scrambler painted in Scrambler Urban Enduro colours. It was made under licence to Ducati by Italwin, an Italian company specialising in pedal-assisted electric bicycles.

In 2017, Ducati Western Europe managing director Edouard Lotthe said they were looking at both scooters and electrics, while VW Group Chairman Matthias Mueller said Ducati would have an electric motorcycle by 2020.

In the same year the Ducati Zero futuristic design concept was produced by the Milano Scuola Politecnica di Design (Design Polytechnic School).

In 2018, Ducati unveiled its first electric mountain bike, the MIG-RR.

Ducati MIG-RR electric scooters mountain bike
Ducati MIG-RR electric mountain bike

And this year Ducati boss Claudio Domenicali admitted he rides a Hypermotard converted to electric power with a Zero FX powertrain and said the company is about to join the electric bike race.

“The future is electric, we’re not far from starting series production,” he said.

So there could be more electrics from Ducati soon, rather than just a licensing agreement for luxury scooters.

Chinese electric scooters deal

Ducati signs deal for electric scooters
Super Soco electric scooter (artist’s impression with Ducati logo)

The new licence deal signed with Vmoto will result in “CUX special Ducati edition” electric scooters.

Vmoto already make cheap electric scooters and motorcycles under the Super Soco brand which are available in Australia.

The top-of-the-range TS11200R electric motorcycle costs just $4990 ride away but has only 22km of range.

Ducati signs deal for electric scooters
Super Soco TS1200R

They say the Ducati/Vmoto CUX scooter will be marketed as a “high-end luxury product at a premium price” and sold globally over the next two years.

Vmoto and Ducati say they will promote the CUX special edition to the “existing worldwide distribution network”.

Ducati is imported by Frasers Motorcycles and Super Soco by Urban Moto Imports.

There is no word yet on whether they will be imported here or which importer would bring them in.

However, Vmoto managing director Charles Chen says the deal is partly intentioned to further grow Vmoto’s product awareness in Europe.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Magnesium may boost electric bikes

Rechargeable batteries with magnesium instead of lithium could extend the range of electric vehicles as much as 50% and make them lighter and cheaper, new research has found.

CVMR Energy Metals says their eight-year research has found that magnesium (Mg) anodes in rechargeable batteries pack 50% more power as it has a higher energy density than lithium.

Rechargeable Li-ion batteries have dominated the rechargeable battery market since the 1990s and are the main energy source in electric vehicles.

All of the current and coming electric motorcycles and scooters use lithium-ion batteries

Harley electric LiveWire magnesium
Harley’s electric motorcycles, bicycles and scooters

However, lithium is rare and expensive, while magnesium is more widely available and therefore cheaper.

Other advantages are that Mg does not need an “intercalation” compound layer, so you can pack up to five-times more metal than lithium in the same-size rechargeable battery.

That also means batteries can be smaller and lighter, which is a huge boon for smaller electric vehicles such as motorcycles and scooters.

CVMR’s breakthrough comes in the use of a higher energy density cathode material and an electrolyte that helps the chemical reactions generate higher energy density than lithium batteries.

The American company hopes to have their magnesium-based batteries available in the next two years. 

Magnesium batteriesBike Battery start

Magnesium use in batteries is not new.

Non-rechargeable Mg batteries have been available for decades.

Magnesium dry batteries were widely used by the US military from 1965 to 1984 and Mg air batteries have been used as land-based backup systems and undersea power sources, using seawater as the electrolyte.

Although magnesium air batteries are primary cells (not rechargeable), they have the potential to become rechargeable by replacing their anode and electrolyte.

Rechargeable issuesKymco proposes battery swap scheme for Ionex electric scooter magnesium

The potential for rechargeable magnesium batteries has been known for some time.

However, finding a cost-effective high-energy density cathode material and suitable electrolytes has slowed progress.

The major problem has been the formation of a non-conductive layer on the Mg anode blocking the recharging of the battery.

In 2016, Honda’s Saitama Industrial Technology Center claimed they had a commercially viable Mg rechargeable battery that used vanadium as a cathode. However, these batteries have not yet hit the market.

Although CVMR owns one of the largest vanadium reserves in Africa, and vanadium has been touted as a suitable cathode in magnesium batteries, the company tested a host of other elements and compounds, such as zirconium, cobalt and tungsten.

They claim vanadium, manganese and transition metals are the most promising.

The US Department of Energy’s Joint Center for Energy Storage Research has also researched chemical reactions involving magnesium.

As part of those studies, Berkeley Lab discovered that the self-stabilising, thin oxide surface layer that forms on the magnesium has some inherent defects that cause unwanted reactions.

CVMR spokesman Kamran Khozan claims they have overcome these defects.

“Today’s scientific discoveries cannot take place in isolation,” he says.

“We all benefit from each other’s efforts, and owe a debt of gratitude to those who have the vision to be leaders in their field of specialisation.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Harley-Davidson electric bicycle and scooter concepts

Harley-Davidson has revealed electric bicycle and electric scooter (above) concepts at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas over night.

Harley electric LiveWire
Electric bicycle

They also revealed the price and more specifications for their LiveWire sports bike which will be available in some countries later this year and Australia late in 2020. Click here for more details.

Harley electric LiveWire
LiveWire

The electric bicycle and scooter concepts were revealed in July last year as artwork when Harley announced its bold new plans for the next four years.

Harley electric LiveWire
Electric motorcycle artwork and concepts for and electric bicycle and scooter

Those bold plans included an adventure bike and a new family of liquid-cooled models.

harley pan america politics season raven electric bicycle
Pan America

Now, the company has revealed working concepts models of the bicycle and scooter to “explore the potential of urban mobility and two-wheeled adoption”.

The concepts are part of the company’s planned “broad portfolio of electric two-wheelers designed to establish the company as the leader in the electrification of mobility over the next several years and inspire new riders with new ways to ride”.

There are no names nor specs for the electric bicycle and scooter as they are only prototypes.

Electric bicycle

Their electric mountain bike is similar to many ebikes coming out of Europe and China with pedal assist. Harley electric LiveWire

But the scooter prototype is something totally different.

It also seems to feature an LED headlight that is just a hollow ring.Harley electric LiveWire

It has inverted forks, no visible rear suspension, large tyres and belt drive.Harley electric LiveWire

There is no word on when these concepts will become production models.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Vespa debuts Elettrica electric scooter

The best thing about the Vespa Elettrica electric scooter is that it is almost a complete mirror of the iconic petrol-powered retro model.

And, of course, just like the standard Vespa, it is twist-and-go-throttle so there is one less hurdle among scooter riders crossing over from an internal combustion model to an electric.

Vespa Elettrica

[embedded content]

From the above video it appears to have a top speed — in power mode — of 50km/h, so it would be legally limited to 60km/h roads in Australia. It also features reverse gear to make parking easier.i

Elettrica has 100km of urban range and the x version will almost reach 200km which is plenty for the weekly commute.

Vespa says it is not just quiet but “totally silent”. We doubt that. Tyres make noise on the road. But the rest of it should be pretty quiet, allowing riders to safely concentrate on the sounds around them.

The battery under the under-seat compartment still allows riders enough room to store a “purpose-built helmet” which is an open-face design, with and without a visor.

Its recharge cable will plug into a normal socket and will charge in about four hours on our 240V power.

Elettrica’s 4.3-inch full-colour TFT dashboard includes important information to help with maintaining battery charge.

It will connect to a smartphone via Bluetooth and an app to display selected features from your phone.

You can access these features via buttons on the bars so you don’t have to touch the screen or your phone.

And if you’ve forgotten where you parked your Vespa, the app saves its position.

Elettrica comes with an electric blue accent (of course) as well as three other colour accents.

Vespa price

Vespa Australia brand manager Gavan Moody says the Elletrica has “generated a lot of interest overseas” since it was launched in concept form at the 2016 EICMA motorcycle show in Milan.

The production version was released last week at the same show to even greater interest.Vespa Elettrica electric scooter

It goes into production this year for European markets.

“Piaggio Asia Pacific advise there is no plan for this region until after 2019, if it was to be introduced here,” Gavan says.

“Price has not been discussed however the indication is it would be at the upper end of the current premium Vespa range.”

Current Vespas range in price from the GTS 250 ie at $7890 (plus on-road costs) to the $12,490 946 Belissima.

Vespa unveils Sei Giorni special edition motorcycle sales elettrica
2018 Vespa Sei Giorni

Would Aussie scooterists be prepared to pay around that amount for an electric scooter?

We think so and here’s why.

Scooter trends

Scooters have been on a dramatic slide in recent years but are slightly bouncing back.

However, the slide has not affected the quality Vespa Italian brand.

In 2011, Vespa sold 1042 scooters in Australia and last year sold 977, down just 6.2% while the whole scooter market plummeted by two-thirds to just 3852 last year.

(Note: Those figures are slightly skewed by the absence of some cheap scooter brands from the official figures, but you get the idea.)

It goes to show that scooterists appreciate top quality and are prepared to pay.

Vespa Elettrica tech specs

  • Continuous power: 3.5kW
  • Maximum power: 4kW
  • Torque: 200Nm (at the wheel)
  • Battery: 48v, 86Ah, 4.2kW/h, by LG Chem
  • Recharge: 4 hours
  • Battery life: 1000 cycles (residual capacity 80%)
  • Battery weight: 25kg
  • Energy recovery: Yes
  • Tyres: 110/70 – 12”; 120/70 – 11”
  • Brake: 200mm single disc; 140mm rear drum
  • Wheelbase: 1350mm
  • Length: 1870mm
  • Width: 735mm
  • Height: 1150mm
  • Seat: 790mm
  • Weight (with battery): 130kg

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com