C5tor
Chief Comedic Instigator
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- Location
- SF Bay Area, CA
The sur-rons are pretty easy to hop up with bigger batteries and hotter controllers. But in stock form, the Alta should have better range than a stock Sur-Ron Light Bee. Not a lot we can do currently to extend the range on the Alta - it is what it is currently (electricity pun intended).
The Alta is heavier, but if you ride conservatively, I think you can get an hour easy. I haven't ridden in racing conditions because I'm a crotchety, old, wimpy geezer, but I ride around on trails for 3-4 hours at a time, and usually have more than 50% battery left. That is hauling my fat ass around, and I'm not exactly a small guy. I'm 200+ lbs without gear, but 270 with gear. (Okay, maybe the "without gear" weight is a little understated, but that's what my drivers license says, so it must be true. And COVID hasn't been kind to my waste-line... But the 270 lbs with gear is sadly accurate. )
Anyway, the point I was making before I went off into the overweight tangent was that mileage might be a little better indication than ride time in some cases. You can ride 10 miles quickly in 10 minutes, or you can ride 10 miles slowly in an hour, and theoretically take about the same energy to get there. You can make it a full hour, you just won't be riding quite as fast. I'd definitely recommend staying in map 1, though. Map 1 isn't necessarily slow, it is just not as quick to get up to speed. It is great for traction, though, and less wheelspin equals more energy to move forward.
The Alta is heavier, but if you ride conservatively, I think you can get an hour easy. I haven't ridden in racing conditions because I'm a crotchety, old, wimpy geezer, but I ride around on trails for 3-4 hours at a time, and usually have more than 50% battery left. That is hauling my fat ass around, and I'm not exactly a small guy. I'm 200+ lbs without gear, but 270 with gear. (Okay, maybe the "without gear" weight is a little understated, but that's what my drivers license says, so it must be true. And COVID hasn't been kind to my waste-line... But the 270 lbs with gear is sadly accurate. )
Anyway, the point I was making before I went off into the overweight tangent was that mileage might be a little better indication than ride time in some cases. You can ride 10 miles quickly in 10 minutes, or you can ride 10 miles slowly in an hour, and theoretically take about the same energy to get there. You can make it a full hour, you just won't be riding quite as fast. I'd definitely recommend staying in map 1, though. Map 1 isn't necessarily slow, it is just not as quick to get up to speed. It is great for traction, though, and less wheelspin equals more energy to move forward.