A motorcycle that's fast, silent and green

The orange safety bracelet that connects a driver's wrist to the ignition key on the Zero X motorcycle resulted from customer feedback, Zero Motorcycles founder Neal Saiki explained.

The Zero runs on lithium-ion batteries rather than gas. As a result, the engine doesn't make any noise. Before the safety bracelet, riders would dismount, forget they left the engine running, and send the bike on a ghost ride after accidentally twisting the throttle. The bracelet flips the key to the off position.

I handled the throttle with extreme caution on my test ride. I almost ran over Saiki, but that was due to driver incompetence. More on that later.

The Scotts Valley, Calif.-based company hopes to ride the growing interest in green vehicles with a line of electric two-wheelers. The company's first model, the Zero X for dirt bikes, can already be bought directly from the company for around $6,900. Google co-founder Larry Page bought one.

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Video: Battery-run motorcycle speeds to 60 mph
CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos stops by to take a look at one of Zero Motorcycles' bikes and take it for a test drive.

In the next few months, Zero Motorcycles will try to come out with a street-legal commuter motorcycle that will be slightly larger and more powerful than the Zero X (along with having the lights and turn signals necessary for street riding). Later, it will follow with a scooter.

Several companies--including Tesla Motors, Zap, Phoenix Motorcars and Wrightspeed--have laid plans to deliver all-electric cars to the market. Tesla's is due later this fall.

But Motorcycles have drawn fewer entrants. Vectrix has released an all-electric scooter with nickel batteries that costs $11,000, and a few other companies have touted newer versions of the electric bike. Major manufacturers and venture capitalists, however, have not yet flocked to the field.

Zero executives, though, assert that motorcycles may be a better fit when it comes to battery-powered vehicles. At $6,900, the bike will be comparable with many 250cc gas-burning motorcycles.

"We're selling a bike that outperforms the ones with gas engines at the same price, and the price is going down," said acting CEO Damon Danielson.

The Zero X will only go 40 miles on a single charge, far less than a gas bike and less than the 70-mile Vectrix. Still, that's enough for most motocross drivers and street-bike commuters, and the street version will go farther. The average U.S. driver only goes about 25 miles to 30 miles a day, according to several studies.

Motorbikes go green

The battery can be recharged in two hours. Motocross professionals also can buy a spare battery for $2,500.

Compare that to the commuter car coming from Think. The car will go about 100 miles on a charge, but it is expected to cost around $35,000 before the battery lease. Tesla will have a sedan in 2009 that will go about 200 miles, but these will cost probably close to $70,000. Electric cars take about three to five hours to fully charge.

Will a 40-mile motorcycle be accepted by consumers while $35,000 cars that have trouble doing a quick San Jose-San Francisco loop be rejected? No one knows, but Zero can at least claim it is eroding the price delta more rapidly than other electric vehicle vendors.

Approximately 1.1 million motorcycles are shipped to U.S. customers annually, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council. Worldwide, motorcycle sales account for $45 billion in sales, according to Danielson.

Getting a bike certified for street riding is somewhat simple, Danielson added. For Zero to convert a motocross bike into a street machine only requires a few modifications, such as adding turn signals and lights. Safety certification and testing takes about 9 to 12 months and costs about $100,000, he said.

Testing a new car involves several crash tests and prototype testing, a process that can consume years and millions of dollars.

Transportation agency officials "figure with motorcycles, you are on your own," Saiki said.

Helicopters to cycles
Saiki has worked on various transportation problems for years. Among other projects, he headed up a group that built the DaVinci IV, a human-powered helicopter and a prop plane for NASA that reached 80,000 feet. He's also designed mountain bikes for, among others, Trek and Santa Cruz Cycles.

Like other electric vehicles, the key to the Zero is the battery pack. The lithium-ion cells in the battery come from a third-party manufacturer, which sells the same cells to the power tools industry. Zero, though, arranges the cells in a particular way to prevent runaway thermal reactions, the phenomenon that causes notebooks to explode. Saiki would not go into technical detail, but said patents are pending on the battery pack. If major manufacturers like Honda get into the market, Saiki said, Zero will likely try to market its battery to them.

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73 comments (Page 1 of 3)
What, exactly, is green about Li-Ion batteries?
by Christopher Hall August 2, 2007 5:21 AM PDT
Those things are an environmental nightmare when it comes to disposal. You're doing more harm by going "green" than if you would have just stuck to the smaller ICE and focused on better particulate removal and chemical scrubbing. What I see is the perception of being green. And like so many other things, there's little to no reality to back it up.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Electric Vehicles Are Not "Green".
by richardhaskins August 2, 2007 7:32 AM PDT
Electricity does not flow from rivers and streams, it is generated by huge, smoke belching, coal fired power plants for the most part. All electric vehicles do is move the smoke to a distant location. It should also be pointed out that ranges for electric vehicles are figured with calculators, not from real world driving. Yes, a rinkydink $7000 excuse for a minibike may go 40 miles, but add hills, stop and go driving and a rider that weighs over 100 pounds and you'll be lucky to get 20 miles. Being stranded in the street on an electric bike is not going to be fun. You'll have to push it until you find someone kind enough to let you plug it in while you wait around for 3 hours. Oh joy.
Reply to this comment View all 6 replies
What's the point?
by scurvy_b August 2, 2007 7:35 AM PDT
Why would a city commuter want to plug in his/her bike every night? One of the great things about motorcycles is the lack of necessary maintenance -- just hit it and go. Plugging in a cord every night is this guy for real? Most people who live in urban areas (like SF) and rely on motorcycles as their main mode of transport park on the street, not an indoor garage. This is not feasible with street parking. What problems are we really solving here? Motorcycles already get 35-40 MPG in the city and 65+ MPG on the highway. All of this just so Canadians can race indoors with really toxic batteries that must be recycled? Solution in search of a problem. Oh and the reporter obviously doesn't ride. Riders love the engine & exhaust noises that their bikes make. Riders would never consider a silent whirring bike to be a plus.
Reply to this comment
High cost!
by hassan_bin_sober August 2, 2007 7:53 AM PDT
Ridiculous! ... If you want economy, you got to pay for it. If I wanted to spend $7000 to ride to work, I could get a rickshaw and a coolie to pull it for less money!
Reply to this comment
Judge slowly
by jhance11 August 2, 2007 8:22 AM PDT
Those who ignore history etc etc. This is the beginning stage. How many times must industry go through this cycle for people to recognize it for what it is. First cars on the road. Expensive, underpowered, high maintenance. Computers, expensive slow took A battery of phd's to run before the microchip. This is the beginning and it will get better from here.
Reply to this comment
No Vision
by jhance11 August 2, 2007 8:29 AM PDT
Once again the naysayers speak. The point of it all is to get the majority of vehicle to stop burning gasoline. The improved tech will come from cars and bikes. As far as recharging. There is some merit to what you say, but people have adapted to hard things they will find A way. again I say look to the future. These same bikes like todays computers will one day go 5 times as far 3 times as fast and take no time to recharge. As far as loving the sound and feel of gas motors at somepoint you have to proritise. when gas is at $4 .00 gal or more maybe then you will get it. We do this not for today but for tomorrow. If it calls for sacrafice so be it
Reply to this comment View reply
Interesting subject but the photos are horrible
by mssoot August 2, 2007 10:53 AM PDT
Who ever took the photos should be shot. An interesting article but the photos never even give a decent view of the bike. Cycle Mag Photographers have nothing to worry about :)
Reply to this comment
Gasoline Motorcycles Sales are Gonna Go Up !!!
by SiXiam August 2, 2007 11:55 AM PDT
Think about it: 60mpg for a normal cheap motorcycle. All for under 6K new. This is what people are gonna buy when gas goes to $6/gallon..
Reply to this comment
Cost per mile deceptive
by havetosay August 2, 2007 12:20 PM PDT
They say it costs $.01 per mile. I'm guessing it's more like $.10 per mile. You have to replace the battery in 3 to 5 years (they should list how many charges the battery will take). The battery costs $2,500. Assuming five years, that's $500 per year plus electricity costs. A 60 mpg gasoline engine would likely come in at less than $.10 per mile. So, while it may leave a smaller "carbon footprint", it's not cheap. The silent acceleration would be fun, though. :)
Reply to this comment View reply
Electric scooters at a reasonable price
by farokh August 2, 2007 1:27 PM PDT
Electric scooters are available at a much lower price from www.e-cycle.ca. In fact some of their products are rated as bicycles and come with pedals.
Reply to this comment View reply
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