% Impetuous asshat hoon(supermoto ice) rider(EV-noob) was given the lowest
cost Zero model to review: slow L1 650W on-board charging = big mistake &
the cause of this sad review. The reviewer really needed the 2x range ZF6.5
model with the max accessory(fastest) charging options, to match their
performance riding life-style. There are plenty of public L2 EVSE in
Hollywood-CA that Zero's Charge Tank L2 j1772 charging option could have
used.

IMO no matter what EV you ride/drive, and even if you charge off L1 99% of
the time, pay the little extra to have the fastest (L2 j1772 and or L3)
charging capability. 

It will pay off for those moments when you have a date with a BMW-gal, don't
want to park your ride between a gritty station's sleeping bum and their
urine-pool, and rely on your eyelash-batting-charm to feed her out of a taco
truck. %


http://www.maxim.com/rides/zero-motorcycle-fxs-review-2016-3
WE RODE AN ALL-ELECTRIC, SUB-$10K SUPERMOTO
[20160308]  CHRIS NELSON

[images  
http://a2.files.maxim.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,dpr_1.0,q_80,w_620/MTM3MTA4NTcxOTcxMTM1MDU5.jpg

http://a3.files.maxim.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,dpr_1.0,q_80,w_620/MTM3MTA4NTczODUwMTgzMjUx.jpg

http://a1.files.maxim.com/image/upload/c_fit,cs_srgb,dpr_1.0,q_80,w_620/MTM3MTA4NTc0NjU1NDg5NjE4.jpg
]

A minute by minute diary of our weekend with Zero Motorcycles’ FXS.

Friday, 9:07AM: This is the quietest burnout in history. I can still hear
the conversation the people on the floor above me are having as smoke pours
off the back tire of the all-electric 2016 Zero FXS and fills the parking
structure. No need to feather the clutch since there isn’t one, no need to
upshift since the motorcycle has one gear. I ease off the front brake lever
and throw the FXS into a turn sideways, straightening out my inside leg as
one should on a supermoto.

Friday, 10:32AM: Sitting at my desk, wondering where I could store a spare
pair of battery packs. Batteries continue getting lighter and more compact,
but the Achilles of EVs is the absence of capacitors capable of
high-density, long-term energy storage. Well aware of the issue, Zero
Motorcycles made it possible to swap the FXS’ batteries in just a couple
minutes; a metal bar holding the batteries in place is unlocked using the
bike’s key, and then twin lithium-ion packs slide out with relative ease.
Unfortunately, replacement batteries cost about three grand a pop.

Friday, 5:44PM: I link my phone to the bike via Bluetooth, and then download
the accompanying app. You can bypass the bike’s preset Sport and Eco riding
modes to establish parameters for your preferred riding style, and then
access those settings by toggling to the Custom riding mode. I spend a few
minutes adjusting the bike’s limits and thresholds before realizing how
geeky I’m being and go inside.

Friday, 11:34PM: The streets are quiet, there aren’t too many people around,
and, most importantly, cops are starting to change shifts. I toss the FXS
around town with absolute abandon. The front tire lifts off the ground going
over humps, the brakes bite down without hesitation, and the rear tire
breaks loose in long corners. Seeing how there’s no noisy engine waking up
the whole neighborhood, I hoon in near silence.

Saturday, 3:19PM: In my underwear, watching Evander Holyfield highlights on
YouTube, when a girl texts to see if I want to go out with her out in
Hollywood. That’s when I remember that I forgot to plug the Zero in last
night. I run to the garage (in my underwear) and plug the FXS into a
110-volt power outlet on the wall. “Should be good to go in a few hours,” I
say to myself, heading for the shower.

Saturday, 6:55PM: 67%. According to the bike’s digital instrument panel that
charge translates to roughly 26 miles of range. The girl’s apartment is 25
miles away—perfect. But a majority of those miles are on the highway—fuck.
EVs don’t like the highway, because many EVs, like the FXS, have
regenerative braking, which trickles charge back into the batteries during
braking. Since you rarely brake on the highway, a steady stream of energy
pours out of the battery packs. Quickly.

Saturday, 7:27PM: It’s my fault I won’t make it. The batteries are at 2%,
and I have eight miles to go. At least. (If I had only charged the bike
overnight.) I pull off the highway and into the first place I figure I can
syphon a bit of juice from, which happens to be a gritty Mobil station with
a taco truck set up out front. I bat my eyelashes at the manager, who
reluctantly lets me use an outlet on the backside of the building. I pull
around behind the gas station, park the bike between a sleeping bum and a
pool of pee, and plug it in.

Saturday, 8:08PM: The petite blonde driving her pearl white BMW 3 Series
can’t help but laugh at the situation, accepts my apology for starting off
our date on such a strange foot, and lets me make it up to her by buying
truck-made steak tacos. By the time we both finish the FXS has 10% battery
life. Enough to get me where I’ve been trying to go, and it’ll stay plugged
in while we watch The Revenant.

Saturday, 11:58PM: That movie had a 156-minute running time, but the
batteries are only half full. (Energy transfer through our old-fashioned
wiring is unfortunately inefficient.) “I could just crash here for the night
and take the fully charged bike home in the morning,” I quip.

Sunday, 12:06AM: I’m on the highway home, riding at a very conservative clip
that’s causing people to honk and holler and point as the pass me by. Going
slow in Eco mode doesn’t seem to be helping much; the charge percentage
steadily tumbles.

Sunday, 12:34AM: The FXS shuts down a quarter-mile from the exit for
Crenshaw Blvd. Last I saw, I had 4% charge; the bike felt differently. I
roll onto the shoulder, dismount, and dejectedly walk the bike toward the
off-ramp. I see the lights of SpaceX, sister company to Elon Musk’s Tesla
electric car company, and decide it’s probably the best place around here to
get a charge. I approach the security building and a guard asks if I ran out
of gas. I laugh and say, “Not exactly.”

Sunday, 1:24AM: We step over the bright orange extension cord as I finish
giving a couple of security guards a walk-around of the FXS. “I didn’t even
know electric motorcycles were a thing,” says one of them. “It looks
badass,” says the other. They’re completely enamored with the FXS but,
noting my current predicament, wonder if they could own an all-electric bike
and not let range anxiety freak them out. “With a little foresight and
planning, you’d be fine,” I say. “Just don’t be an impetuous asshat like
me.”

Sunday, 2:44AM: Using my Arai helmet as a makeshift pillow, I try to nap on
the pavement. Through ups and downs, the Zero FXS has neither excited me nor
annoyed me, but instead has me feeling hopeful. As compelling, desirable,
all-electric vehicles like this—what with striking designs and thoughtful
user interfaces—come to market, we’ll be forced to improve battery design
and establish an EV-friendly infrastructure that will nix range anxiety. 

For now that’s a dream, and that’s fine, since I have other things to
fantasize about. Like doing the second quietest burnout in history.
[© 2016 Maxim Media]
...
http://www.zeromotorcycles.com/zero-fxs/specs.php
Specs  ZERO FXS ZF3.3
r:45/18mi
capacity 2.9 kWh
Charger type 650 W, integrated
Charge time (standard)  4.7 hours (100% charged)
...
http://www.zeromotorcycles.com/charging/
CHARGING  STANDARD (LEVEL 1)
Wouldn’t it be nice to never stop at a gas station? ...

LEVEL 2  CHARGE FASTER. CHARGE ON THE GO ...
Charge Tank ... triples on-board charging speed ... recharge ... in ... 2-3
hours ... using the popular J1772 standard ...
...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoon
Badass hoon




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