Hi James,

The suitability of purpose really depends on your average cruising speed.
At avg cruising speeds of 35mph or less, I'd say that the Vectrix would work
for anyone with a daily drive (total driving distance per day) of up to 40
miles, leaving comfortable margin to spare.  At an avg speed of 40mph, the
bike would be suitable for a daily drive of up to 35 miles.  At avg cruising
speeds of 45mph and above, I would say that the Vectrix would be suitable
for a daily drive of up to 30 miles, again leaving comfortable margin to
spare.  If you can charge at work, then you can double those daily driving
distance suitability numbers, but that doesn't apply to your situation from
what you said.  These recommendations are based on my riding experience to
date, now at around 500 miles.  As you have a 12-mile commute each way plus
some additional small errands, I am guessing that your total daily driving
distance is around 30 miles.  If that is the case, then I would think the
Vectrix could well be suitable for your needs, no matter what your average
cruising speed is.  You should really try one out on an extended test ride
to get a feel for it and determine if it will meet your needs.  If you are
ever down this way in Florida, you are welcome to take my bike for an
extended daylong or weekend-long test ride.

If you are doing a 70-80% depth of discharge on every cycle, then I think
you can use that 1700 cycle life figure that the company gives as a
conservative assumption.  If you were doing a 50% depth of discharge most of
the time with only a once-per-month deep-cycle full discharge (to help
maintain bottom-of-charge memory retention), then I'd say you'd probably be
looking at a cycle life more like 3,000 cycles.  But since you can't charge
at work, then based on a 30 mile per day driving cycle, I'd estimate a daily
depth of discharge of around 75%, something like that.  So yeah, let's take
1700 cycles as a good estimate.  Now, your estimate that those 1700 cycles
will be reached in 5 years implies that you would be riding 30 miles just
about every single day, 7 days a week, and charging every single day.  So
that means you would be putting about 11,000 miles on the bike every year.
That's a lot of riding, but assuming that's the case (from your own
description), then yes, you are right that according to the company's listed
specs on the battery, the battery's useful life would be reached in about 5
years at 55,000 miles on the bike.  In fact, I believe that is the expected
life of the battery pack -- 55,000 miles.  You can probably figure on it
costing about $2,500 to replace the battery pack.

Best regards,

Charles Whalen
Delray Beach, Florida


----- Original Message ----- 
From: James Flynn
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 10:11 AM
Subject: [FLEAA] Charles Whalen Vectrix

Dear Charles
I am not even sure this e mail will reach Charles Whalen - but here goes
anyway!

Charles I read the brief review of your initial experiences with the Vectrix
on the internet.

I am thinking of buying the Vectrix electric scooter. I have a daily commute
of 12 miles each way and some small mileage some days also. I have no way
really of charging the scooter while at work. I have never owned an electric
vehicle of any kind as I have always commuted on gas powered two wheelers. I
would be very interested in hearing how you find the Vectrix and any other
thoughts you think relevant. You seem to know a lot about battery
technology. The Vectrix technical information states that the the battery is
good for 1700 full discharge cycles - does this mean that if the battery is
close to being fully drained each night when I charge it up that the battery
will be used up after less than 5 years ie on the assumption that I use the
bike every day for work?

That's a lot of free information I am looking for!!!

Regards
James Flynn


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