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Which mods?
I've got a few things brewing behind the scenes here. Having a second Alta allows me to experiment a bit. Lets just say my EXR enjoys leaving rubber on the tarmac right now
Which mods?
I think the 20HP rating is probably the continues rating, not the 30 second burst rating which could easily be 10-20HP more.Looking at the video of that guy clearing a medium triple it could be a 250cc equivalent (40hp). On the track the bike looks more like an Alta rather than a Freeride.
HP is not a good number to evaluate an electric motor with, or to use to compare it to a gas engine. With an electric motor developing almost 100% torque from RPM 1, it feels a lot stronger than the HP rating will indicate. The formula for HP is (RPM * T) / 5252. Since the formula has RPM in it, electric motors don't indicate like a gas 2 stroke will in the lower RPMs. Torque is a better number to evaluate an electric motor with.
When I did the conversion on my riding lawn mower I replace an 18 HP gas motor with a 4-5 HP electric motor and it is as strong, if not stronger, than the gas motor.
Excellent point. Show me the FT IBS data!HP is not a good number to evaluate an electric motor with, or to use to compare it to a gas engine. With an electric motor developing almost 100% torque from RPM 1, it feels a lot stronger than the HP rating will indicate. The formula for HP is (RPM * T) / 5252. Since the formula has RPM in it, electric motors don't indicate like a gas 2 stroke will in the lower RPMs. Torque is a better number to evaluate an electric motor with.
When I did the conversion on my riding lawn mower I replace an 18 HP gas engine with a 4-5 HP electric motor and it is as strong, if not stronger, than the gas engine.
Makes me wonder whether our bikes have 40/50 hp bursts or continuous. The dyno pulls that I did were less than 10 seconds in duration each.I think the 20HP rating is probably the continues rating, not the 30 second burst rating which could easily be 10-20HP more.
Totally disagree.HP is not a good number to evaluate an electric motor with, or to use to compare it to a gas engine. With an electric motor developing almost 100% torque from RPM 1, it feels a lot stronger than the HP rating will indicate. The formula for HP is (RPM * T) / 5252. Since the formula has RPM in it, electric motors don't indicate like a gas 2 stroke will in the lower RPMs. Torque is a better number to evaluate an electric motor with.
When I did the conversion on my riding lawn mower I replace an 18 HP gas engine with a 4-5 HP electric motor and it is as strong, if not stronger, than the gas engine.
That is a great question. If I recall correctly, my MSO for my 2019 EXR rated our bikes at 20kw (maybe 26kw?) power right on the MSO. kind of figured that was the MAP1 rating. I turned in the MSO to DMV when I titled and registered my bike so I can't look it up now.Makes me wonder whether our bikes have 40/50 hp bursts or continuous. The dyno pulls that I did were less than 10 seconds in duration each.
That is a great question. If I recall correctly, my MSO for my 2019 EXR rated our bikes at 20kw (maybe 26kw?) power right on the MSO. kind of figured that was the MAP1 rating. I turned in the MSO to DMV when I titled and registered my bike so I can't look it up now.
Thanks for confirming it was 20kw, so my thinking is they rated our bikes peak output in MAP1, or this is the continues constant rating our bikes are capable of.
Google translate says:
If you're using the Alta as a benchmark, it never had a chance...Not super impressed with the light bee
If you're using the Alta as a benchmark, it never had a chance...
You definitely need to lower your standards here.