Korto
New here
HI. I'm thinking about an electric motorcycle sidecar, and trying to work out if it's practical (I'll say 'practical' because when I say 'possible' I get people replying "Oh, anything's possible with enough money!", which isn't entirely helpful).
To set the scene, I currently have a 4 person motorcycle sidecar (2 on the bike, 2 in the cab), being pulled by a 1996 Suzuki VS1400. Total weight of the rig about 400kg, fully loaded including luggage probably around 750kg.
She handles it, able to do highway speeds (110km/h) in reasonable comfort, but she's a bit thirsty (10km/L) and is having increasing mechanical problems in her old age.
I was first thinking about converting the Suzuki to electric, but there was no obvious way to go about that (and would leave us without transport for what could be a long duration), so then I thought about picking up an old BMW from a wreckers and contacting these blokes, L.M. Creations, who make conversion kits for them.
A problem I see is the rig is much heavier, and so would need a lot more battery nd probably a bigger motor. They say 80km for their tank battery, but I'll probably be getting half that. Of course, there's more room in the sidecar so possibly a distributed battery, but this battery problem really becomes acute for long trips. I'd need at least a 200km, more like 300+km range, and I suspect that would be a very big battery, with a lot of weight, so it can't all go in the sidecar (very heavy sidecars create very unsafe handling), and that's a lot of weight when braking to all go on one little front wheel.
I do have an idea of a trailer carrying a "long trip" battery. The bike and sidecar would have enough battery for perhaps 100km, while the detachable trailer has another 200km in it. The trailer would have its own braking system hooked up to the rear brake (I vaguely remember reading about electric trailer brakes somewhere) so it won't overload the poor front brake, and for normal trips the trailer can just stay at home and save carting all that weight.
If I can Vehicle-to-Grid the trailer with our solar panels, it can act as a house battery, so it's not dead money.
Anyway, that's what I'm thinking at present, but I don't know much about it. Nothing's happening soon, as I'll only have the money after we inherit. Which will be sooner than we like, but still probably a couple of years.
To set the scene, I currently have a 4 person motorcycle sidecar (2 on the bike, 2 in the cab), being pulled by a 1996 Suzuki VS1400. Total weight of the rig about 400kg, fully loaded including luggage probably around 750kg.
She handles it, able to do highway speeds (110km/h) in reasonable comfort, but she's a bit thirsty (10km/L) and is having increasing mechanical problems in her old age.
I was first thinking about converting the Suzuki to electric, but there was no obvious way to go about that (and would leave us without transport for what could be a long duration), so then I thought about picking up an old BMW from a wreckers and contacting these blokes, L.M. Creations, who make conversion kits for them.
A problem I see is the rig is much heavier, and so would need a lot more battery nd probably a bigger motor. They say 80km for their tank battery, but I'll probably be getting half that. Of course, there's more room in the sidecar so possibly a distributed battery, but this battery problem really becomes acute for long trips. I'd need at least a 200km, more like 300+km range, and I suspect that would be a very big battery, with a lot of weight, so it can't all go in the sidecar (very heavy sidecars create very unsafe handling), and that's a lot of weight when braking to all go on one little front wheel.
I do have an idea of a trailer carrying a "long trip" battery. The bike and sidecar would have enough battery for perhaps 100km, while the detachable trailer has another 200km in it. The trailer would have its own braking system hooked up to the rear brake (I vaguely remember reading about electric trailer brakes somewhere) so it won't overload the poor front brake, and for normal trips the trailer can just stay at home and save carting all that weight.
If I can Vehicle-to-Grid the trailer with our solar panels, it can act as a house battery, so it's not dead money.
Anyway, that's what I'm thinking at present, but I don't know much about it. Nothing's happening soon, as I'll only have the money after we inherit. Which will be sooner than we like, but still probably a couple of years.
