'whistling, whining and chirping insistently ... instantaneously piles on
speed> incredible, intoxicating and oh-so naughty'

https://home.bt.com/lifestyle/motoring/motoring-features/touching-the-livewire-we-test-the-first-electric-powered-harley-davidson-11363985758251
Touching the Livewire: We test the first electric-powered Harley-Davidson
By Matt Kimberley  09 June 2015

[images  
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https://home.bt.com/images/touching-the-livewire-we-test-the-electric-harley-davidson-136398575807703901-150609112858.jpg
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Yes, it’s a Harley-Davidson, but it’s powered by electricity. It may not be
for the purists, but the American motorbike giant might be onto something...

Harley-Davidson's new protoype electric motorbike, Project Livewire

Electric power. Harley-Davidson. These, you'd think, are mutually exclusive
terms; things to be discussed in very separate sentences. But you'd be
wrong.

Harley has taken both a small step and a giant leap, developing Project
Livewire and touring America and Europe to gauge media and customer reaction
to its first venture into electric motorbikes.

The Livewire is an electric motorcycle with a forward-leaning riding
position and a touch-screen user interface. Departures from tradition don't
come much bigger.

The American brand is famous – and loved – for its big, bruising
twin-cylinder [ice] bikes with their 'potato-potato-potato' soundtrack, but
this is one Harley you probably won't hear coming. It uses a powerful
electric motor and batteries good for somewhere between 30 and 80 miles,
depending on how addicted you get to the huge, instant acceleration on
offer.

But we'll get to that later. The first thing you notice is the styling, and
this looks like no Harley you've ever seen before. The lack of an engine is
obvious, and there's perhaps something more interesting that could be done
with the flat black plastic side panels. At least the battery housing is
made to look like a crank case.

The sleek headlight looks like a prop from Close Encounters of the Third
Kind, and everything is a bit 21st-century behind it, with a screen
displaying charge capacity, live power usage and, of course, your speed.

The interactive display screen on Harley-Davidson's new protoype electric
motorbike, Project Livewire.

There's 'only' 74bhp, though 52lb/ft is on tap from a standstill right up
beyond legal digits. But mark my words: the numbers aren't nearly as big as
the impression they make when you spin your right wrist. It won't leave any
H2s languishing in the dust, but the instantaneous way it piles on the speed
as if it weighs only a tenth of its 210kg dry weight is incredible,
intoxicating and oh-so naughty.

It's so easy to manage, too. In fact it's arguably easier to ride gently
than most petrol-powered bikes, firstly because of the absence of gears and
secondly because of the heavy off-throttle 'engine braking', where the motor
regenerates some power and feeds it back to the batteries. It can bring you
to a halt without needing the brakes at all.

What of the soundtrack, though? Believe it or not, the Livewire sounds good.
It's certainly no Big Vee, but it's pretty noisy for an electric vehicle of
any kind, whistling, whining and chirping insistently away like a spaceship
from a 1980s sci-fi movie. It steps up with hard use, too, and that's key
for riding enjoyment. I certainly liked it.

There are two riding modes: one for power and one for range. Your head leans
you toward the 80-mile potential of the latter, but let's be honest, you're
not going to choose it. Bikes are picked with emotion, not logic.
Unfortunately, that means a quick blast around the local area will flatten
the charge and leave you waiting a few hours for the power to course back
into the low-mounted batteries.

At least you can enjoy the uncommonly low centre of gravity while you're on
it. As soon as you're moving, the weight disappears altogether. It feels
like it could be a superb urban scratcher for scything through traffic on
the way out to greener pastures and better roads, but there's still a bit of
work to do on the handling.

The front end of the Livewire is supremely twitchy, verified with a chat to
other bike journalists at the event to make sure it wasn't just my bike.
Millimetric movements of the bars have the bike starting to turn, and it's
far too easy to turn in too much and end up making a truly awful hash of a
low-speed bend.

Things are better at higher speeds, where the nose settles down a bit, but
it's an area for Harley to tweak before any production electric bike is
signed off.

A few miles ridden at Millbrook Proving Ground provide just a taste of what
Project Livewire could create. Better battery technology is needed for more
range, but the power delivery is amazing. The potential here is clear. It's
a lifestyle bike just like any other Harley, but the company is looking to
the future with one eye on emissions regulations ...
[© bt.com]
...
http://forums.roadbikereview.com/general-cycling-discussion/what-makes-bike-stable-twitchy-204965.html
twitchy > unstable




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