Mr. Antimatter
New member
- Likes
- 1
- Location
- Minneapolis, MN
Hi, everyone. I'm a 53 year old rider, and have been on two wheels since the late 1970's. I'm in the process of thinning the herd, and looking to the future when I can have a three-bike garage to fulfill all my riding needs. I wrote out the list of desirable attributes for bike #3, and they were as follows:
-Street Legal/Used as a commuter for 'light' days (40 mile round trip, 50/50 highway and surface streets).
-Light enough to load in the bed of my truck (under 300 lbs)
-Could be used to change riding position at my local short track/let my knees rest a bit from my supersport
-Not maintenance intensive (no big top-end or bottom-end rebuilds)
-Could run on ice (winter, frozen lakes, studded tires, that sort of nonsense)
Under the list, I wrote 'electric?', and here I am.
Specifics: my local track day provider runs a 1.1 mile track with tons of turns and only two short straights. It's mostly 2nd and 3rd gear on my 2013 ZX6R, topping out at 80-100 mph on the back straight. The Ninja does a great job for this, but by early afternoon my knees are telling me to switch to a different riding position. Having a 2nd bike that was a supermoto to switch to would be fun. An added bonus would be to relieve my cabin fever in the winter by doing some track days on some of the frozen lakes locally. The favorite bike for this is generally a lowered 450 dirt bike, with spiked tires and fenders (keeps frozen ice chunks from hitting other riders). I'm by no means a fast rider/racer, but I'd consider myself in the top 1/3 of riders at most track days, meaning I don't think I'd be able to extract full performance from the bike in 'overclocked' mode.
Has anyone done a track day with an Alta supermoto? I'm guessing I'll need to add some charging between sessions, although I'm not opposed to switching off between the ZX6R and the supermoto if necessary to let the battery regain some charge. The track day runs three 20 minute sessions per hour (slow-fast-supermoto), so I'd be running an hour combined time in the morning, a hour break for lunch, then 80 minutes total in the afternoon. The other thing I'd like the bike for is to have in the back of my truck when traveling with my wife, so I could nip off an do a 60-90 minute ride while she goes bird watching (her big hobby). Bonus points for having a bike that wouldn't disturb said birds when leaving or arriving back in camp.
Otherwise, I'm looking forward to hanging out and learning more about these bikes.
-Street Legal/Used as a commuter for 'light' days (40 mile round trip, 50/50 highway and surface streets).
-Light enough to load in the bed of my truck (under 300 lbs)
-Could be used to change riding position at my local short track/let my knees rest a bit from my supersport
-Not maintenance intensive (no big top-end or bottom-end rebuilds)
-Could run on ice (winter, frozen lakes, studded tires, that sort of nonsense)
Under the list, I wrote 'electric?', and here I am.
Specifics: my local track day provider runs a 1.1 mile track with tons of turns and only two short straights. It's mostly 2nd and 3rd gear on my 2013 ZX6R, topping out at 80-100 mph on the back straight. The Ninja does a great job for this, but by early afternoon my knees are telling me to switch to a different riding position. Having a 2nd bike that was a supermoto to switch to would be fun. An added bonus would be to relieve my cabin fever in the winter by doing some track days on some of the frozen lakes locally. The favorite bike for this is generally a lowered 450 dirt bike, with spiked tires and fenders (keeps frozen ice chunks from hitting other riders). I'm by no means a fast rider/racer, but I'd consider myself in the top 1/3 of riders at most track days, meaning I don't think I'd be able to extract full performance from the bike in 'overclocked' mode.
Has anyone done a track day with an Alta supermoto? I'm guessing I'll need to add some charging between sessions, although I'm not opposed to switching off between the ZX6R and the supermoto if necessary to let the battery regain some charge. The track day runs three 20 minute sessions per hour (slow-fast-supermoto), so I'd be running an hour combined time in the morning, a hour break for lunch, then 80 minutes total in the afternoon. The other thing I'd like the bike for is to have in the back of my truck when traveling with my wife, so I could nip off an do a 60-90 minute ride while she goes bird watching (her big hobby). Bonus points for having a bike that wouldn't disturb said birds when leaving or arriving back in camp.
Otherwise, I'm looking forward to hanging out and learning more about these bikes.