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Tag Archive | "quantya"

2010 electric ebikes From Quantya

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2010 electric ebikes From Quantya


Quantya, the Swiss electric motorcycle manufacturer, has unveiled two new bikes at the annual Swiss-Moto show in Zürich, held in February.

The new machines, the Squter P1 and junior-sized MMX off-roader, run on lithium polymer batteries and DC axial gap brush motors, as seen already in Quantya’s Track and Strada models.

The company says that the Squter (scooter) can reach speeds up to 50mph and still cover 43.5 miles in a single charge.

The MMX junior bike has a top speed limited to about 30 mph, with enough charge time for your kid to rip up a decent sized part of your lovely back garden.

Read the complete article at:
2010 Quantya electric bikes revealed

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Zero Motorcycles Meets Europe’s Quantya

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Zero Motorcycles Meets Europe’s Quantya


zero-s-jay-leno

Las Vegas, NV — Zero produces their e-motorcycles in the U.S. while Quantya is based in Switzerland. Both cycles met in May, 2009 in a a head to head in a competition to see which one would hold the title of the fastest electric motorcycle in the motorcross category.

The special event for the two electric bikes took place as part of the halftime show at the AMA Maxxis MiniMotor Supercross race, which took place in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The winner was the Quantya Track.  Each company had 5 bikes in the competition. Quantya places in first and second while Zero’s best finish was third.

Zero has already released their Zero S street bike, and Quantya is getting their version for street use ready.

The race marked the first time in history that any two electric motorcycle manufacturers were on the same track together for head to head competition.

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The Quantya Strada Electric Bike

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The Quantya Strada Electric Bike


quantya-electric-bike

DirtRider.com has done its usual excellent job in reviewing the e-cycle offerings – this time for the Swiss company Quantya. We summarize some of their findings below.

Quantya makes two off-road models, the Track and the Strada. The Strada is a full street-legal version with DOT certification and ready for a license plate in all 50 states. The Track, on the other hand, is the same bike without the street-legal lights, speedo, or secondary battery to run these functions.

The Track is sized as a ‘fun bike,’ in the CRF150F range. It’s designed for casual trail riding. Because it’s so quiet, backyard tracks won’t bother the neighbors, and riding on trails near houses won’t even be noticed.

The Quantya bikes weigh as much as a full sized gas bike, and the suspension is a ‘real motorcycle’ suspension. Travel is twelve inches front and rear. The suspension absorbs the hits as well as its travel would be expected to, and the bike overall has a nice, planted feel.

According to DirtRider, the tires on the Quantya seem designed for minimal rolling resistance rather than dirt traction. This is probably the most limiting factor to the bike’s performance.

The bike also has a ‘freewheel’ effect. When the rider cuts the throttle, the engine ‘freewheels,’ a sensation similar to an auto clutch disengaging when you lock up the rear tire. With an auto-clutch, a blip of the throttle will bring the compression braking back, but with an electric bike the motor has to ’spool up’ to get back to deliver drive. This freewheel effect is an argument to opt for the rear brake bar-mounted lever, as dragging the rear is a technique to minimize this freewheeling.

Charge time is approximately two hours for about a 45 minute aggressive ride. In addition to some backyard moto and leave-from-home trail riding, the Quanta could also become your around-town scoot or even a commuter bike if the distances weren’t too long.

What could be better than a second bike that never needs its air filter cleaned, its valves adjusted, its engine overhauled, its oil changed, and so on?

Source:
http://www.dirtrider.com/reviews/motocross/141_0905_get_amped_quantya_track_web_test/index.html

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Dirt Rider Test-Rides the Zero-X

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Dirt Rider Test-Rides the Zero-X


zero-testing

Santa Cruz, California — The Santa Cruz, California-based company, Zero, has recently debuted its new Zero-X Electric Motorcycle, the result of years of work by Neal Saiki, founder, and inventor of the new e-cycle. Saiki is a former NASA engineer.

The overall design of the frame and plastic of the Zero-X is revolutionary, according to its reviewers from Dirt Rider, who also comment that the layout of the electric motor is innovative as well.

The bike is powered by a proprietary lithium-ion rechargeable power pack, and has an aircraft-grade aluminum frame and swingarm. There is also a massive power module cradled in the center of the frame – which weighs 45 pounds and taking up most of the room in the motor area.

To start the bike, you simpy turn the key, flip the on/off switch to “on” and then wait about 0.562 seconds for the green light to come on.

Because the bike is silent, it is easy to forget it’s on. Flick the throttle and the cycle moves forward immediately, with no hesitation.

The Zero-X’s has a 20 horsepower engine. A test rider was able to climb Glen Helen’s famed Mount St. Helens with little trouble. There are two switches behind the handlebar-that can  alter the Zero-X’s power. According to the reviewer, the “hit” switch doesn’t seem to make a massive difference, but the “low” setting makes the overall speed of the electric motorcycle much mellower. You have to toggle the key to go from low to high, which is a good safety feature.

The test rider pointed out that compared to a full-size 250, the Zero-X is fragile, but that’s because you’re contrasting it with a big bike. In relation to a mountain bike, though, this motorcycle is quite strong.

You truly have to ride it like a bicycle – that means no blatantly hard landings and no slamming into things; you have to use finesse to ride the bike. At 151 pounds, the Zero-X is about all that the mountain bike-style fork and shock combo can take, and the entire chassis takes on a nimble, flickable feel in the dirt. Although not as stable as some would like, the lightweight feel of the machine certainly is a benefit to the power-to-weight ratio, and though the Zero-X can’t take super-hard hits or big drops, it is still capable for mild trail scenarios.

It takes a while to get used to the layout of the bike. With two hand brakes and a throttle being the extent of the controls, there’s no need for your feet to do anything.

Some components-the chain guide, for instance-are low, obtrusive and simply not designed for serious off-road use (but then again, neither was the bike).  The brakes are yet another mountain bike-inspired part and do a good job of stopping the bike when new, though Dirt Rider reviewers have heard from customers who bought this bike in late ‘08 that the pads wear out almost immediately.

It was the battery duration that would be extremely important.

The testers ran three batteries out at the Zero-X intro, and they all died in different fashions.

One battery slowly grew weaker and chugged to a stop, another felt as though it operated at one-third power forever and then fell out, and yet another battery dropped dead like someone had turned the key off. This variation is most likely because the speed with which the battery runs out, much like a tank of gas, is dependent on which mode you are in and how hard you are on the throttle.

Swapping out a battery with a replacement takes less than three minutes, but an extra batter costs $2950 (plus shipping) for the replacement.

Otherwise, it takes about two and a half hours to recharge the battery.

Right now, the major competitor to the Zero is the Quantya electric bike.

Specifications
MSRP: $7750
Claimed Weight (with battery): 151 lb
Fuel Capacity: None.

Source:
DirtRider.com

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Anything You Can Do… Zero Backflips

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Anything You Can Do… Zero Backflips


zero-motorcross-backflip

Test riders of Quantya Electric Dirt Bikes – who call themselves the Metal Mulisha wore helmet cams to acquire footage of electric dirt bike backflips!

Electric Dirt Bikes like the Quantya have zero risk of electric shock, even when they’re backflipping through the air.

Extra viewing: Damon Geller’s YouTube video helmet cam footage
Source: Metal Mulisha
Source: Dirt Rider

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Quantya Test by Dirt Rider

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Quantya Test by Dirt Rider


quantya-test

Riverside’s Milestone MX Park testing various bikes and products for our the July issue of Dirt Rider magazine.

They tested a Quantya electric bikes.The  rider is Pete Peterson

One of the oddest things to get used to on an electric bike is the battery and subsequent lack of a fuel tank. The little meter on the Quantya sits right where a traditional gas cap would go. It tells the rider when the battery is dry, as indicated by the red light.

As always, time at the track is spent working on a variety of product tests for the Dirt Rider Tested section. They test gloves, for example – such as  Thor gloves, and recently found that “although they aren’t as protective as some other gloves, blood does wash out of them quite well.”

The main track at Milestone MX is somewhat  technical, and with hundreds of riders on it and plenty of ruts the course was in National track shape by the end of the day.

Ricky Yorks, AMA pro and test riders for Dirt Rider, is aboard a Quantya at Milestone

Source: Dirt Rider

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Motocross Charity Tests Quantya Electric Bike

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Motocross Charity Tests Quantya Electric Bike


quantya-electric-bike

Staff at the Dover-based Motocross Challenge Project (MXCP) took delivery of a Swiss-made green machine, Quantya, on Wednesday and said they would eventually like all the bikes they use to be free of pollutants.

Project manager Ric Newton said: “I think it’s an amazing piece of equipment that I’ve seen in operation and I believe it’s the way forward and something we should be promoting to young people. They need to know how important it is to look after the environment. “We want to be able to keep a couple of the bikes and promote them further because we aim to be a green training school and that’s what the world has got to be about.”

The charity works with Kent County Council, the prison service and other organisations to help young people learn outside the classroom. Members of the public can also use its facilities at the weekend.

The bikes tested this week were developed by Quantya, which released its first electric off-road bike the FMX in 2007.

Quantya has been advertising its green initiative at motoring exhibitions throughout the world.

The Quantya bikes cost about £7,000 to buy and take about two hours to fully charge. The power would then last for an hour’s worth of racing or about two-and-a-half hours of regular use.

Visit Quantya Bikes or more information.

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MCN Get Hold of New Quantya Strada

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MCN Get Hold of New Quantya Strada


Charging the New Quantya Strada

Charging the New Quantya Strada

The guys over at MCN have got a hold of the Quantya Strada electric motorcycle. Check it out here. I can really picture this sitting next to the Playstation. What do you think?

Photos: MCN

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KTM to Make All-Electric Motorbike

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KTM to Make All-Electric Motorbike


KTM set to make and all-electric motorbike

KTM set to make and all-electric motorbike

KTM has announced its plans to release an all-electric dirt bike into showrooms for 2010. Spec include a lithium-ion battery with an estimated range of 30-40 minutes race time. The bike will hit the scales at 198 pounds and the same torque of a two-stroke 250cc bike. Like other electric bikes it also runs silently which would make free-riding through the wilderness and exhilarating experience. KTM will join other manufacturers ZERO, Brammo and Quantya who are all releasing all electric motorbikes. Honda and Yamaha also have bikes in the pipeline for 2010.

Photo via Hell for Leather. See many more here.
Source: Wired

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Honda Electric Vectrix Superbike

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Honda Electric Vectrix Superbike


Honda Vectrix Superbike

Honda Vectrix Superbike

The car industry is proclaiming it’s electric future loudly, but quietly leading the way is the bike industry. KTM is bringing an electric bike to the market by 2010, and Quantya already has an electric dirt bike, the Strada available in the market.

The latest addition to the electric bike stable is Honda with the new Vectrix Superbike concept revealed in Milan. Honda is partnering with Yuasa to add an electric bike to the 2010 line-up.

The planned electric bike will be battery-powered and emit no CO2. Yuasa and Honda will partner to develop the new lithium-ion batteries. They plan on building a manufacturing facility near Kyoto in Japan with an estimated cost of $18.5 million.

If this concept bike is anything to go on the future of electric bikes will be very exciting.

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