4LivesPerGallon
1 kW
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2015
- Messages
- 305
I used to see lots before.
What happened?
What happened?
mistercrash said:Riding at 32 km/h is frikkin boring. I'm thinking most people who bought scooters got some fun at first, then started getting bored of the low speed and low torque, then a lot got sick of it once the SLAs died. Bring in something that falls into the Canadian LSM category (Low Speed Motorcycles limited to a max speed of 70 km/h) with tons of torque and a range of 100 km, tell people that it will be cheap to license and insure and it takes a cheap LSM license, tell people that it will cost between 10 and 20 dollars worth of electricity to run per year, sell it for less than $5000 and I'm thinking many will notice, I would.
4LivesPerGallon said:I used to see lots before.
What happened?
mistercrash said:Riding at 32 km/h is frikkin boring. I'm thinking most people who bought scooters got some fun at first, then started getting bored of the low speed and low torque, then a lot got sick of it once the SLAs died. Bring in something that falls into the Canadian LSM category (Low Speed Motorcycles limited to a max speed of 70 km/h) with tons of torque and a range of 100 km, tell people that it will be cheap to license and insure and it takes a cheap LSM license, tell people that it will cost between 10 and 20 dollars worth of electricity to run per year, sell it for less than $5000 and I'm thinking many will notice, I would.
4LivesPerGallon said:mistercrash said:Riding at 32 km/h is frikkin boring. I'm thinking most people who bought scooters got some fun at first, then started getting bored of the low speed and low torque, then a lot got sick of it once the SLAs died. Bring in something that falls into the Canadian LSM category (Low Speed Motorcycles limited to a max speed of 70 km/h) with tons of torque and a range of 100 km, tell people that it will be cheap to license and insure and it takes a cheap LSM license, tell people that it will cost between 10 and 20 dollars worth of electricity to run per year, sell it for less than $5000 and I'm thinking many will notice, I would.
Imo, from experience, and talking to scooterists, the major causes of the Fall of Electric Scooters in Vancouver are as follows:
- Unreliable scooter and poor/costly service from the retailers (Motorino is excluded in this category. Motorino has invested in substantial test equipment and has parts and has knowledgeable, experienced techies. Nice, ethical people, too.)
- Unsuitable design and components, e.g. non-tubeless tires
- Much, much higher cost-per-mile than similar gasoline vehicles, once depreciation and battery-replacement costs are factored in. Try reselling a used scooter on Craigslist -- you don't get much.
- Theft. Statistically, one out of every four bikes are stolen, annually. And, statistically, one out of five owners will not buy another one.
- Accidents and injuries, some from bad design, like side mirrors that don't extend far enough to work.
- LSM's that are too tall, too slow, and have a Center of Gravity that is too high.
- Gas scooters have had a major sales decline in North America. Saw an annual sales chart recently. Peak was in 2008.
- Range. Declining range with age. Then, battery chargers that go "off specification" with time and destroy the battery pack. Or, battery chargers that don't adjust the charge rate downwards as the battery capacity diminishes, killing the pack prematurely. (It's complicated.)
- Weather woes for those who don't wear full-face helmets and bike poncho's. (Wearing a scooter poncho gets ridicule and laughs from high school girls.)
- Uncomfortable ride, unless you make some changes to the scooter, or your riding pants.
Robert90 said:I test-drove this scooter a couple of weeks ago...
http://www.btmontreal.ca/videos/4268372326001/
Seems too provide the speed, range and quality at a price below $5000.
Electric Broomstick said:Robert90 said:I test-drove this scooter a couple of weeks ago...
http://www.btmontreal.ca/videos/4268372326001/
Seems too provide the speed, range and quality at a price below $5000.
Could you provide the make and model please? I hate video because they always force you to install a bunch of crap and then sit through ads just to see it.
granolaboy said:There was a thread on these scooters a few weeks ago:
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=71391
One of their scooters looks like a Motorino Gtx to me.
skeelo said:Good to see lately in central vancouver, east van to cambie area, a lot more motorino's e-scooters been riding about!
Dauntless said:Just curious on the weather situation: How much of the year could you depend on the scooter? Is there much summer rain?
SoCal you have maybe 20 days a year you couldn't ride under power in the rain, but without power there can be some hot days you wouldn't survive on your bike.
Dauntless said:So maybe that explains the vanishing scooters. The grit destroys them quickly and people give up. I can imagine how quickly a hub motor might be endangered. I'd hate to even think of taking Shenta's lovely Grom there.
Ah, who has solutions to such problems?
This guy used to park on Hastings all the time. Didn't see any lock, but maybe he had a cable underneath, or U lock thru a wheel. But pretty conspicuous if someone did steal it! Even just to drag it down the street would take more balls than stealing a bicycle.4LivesPerGallon said:The Velomobile should be a good solution, if it has a motion-alarm-pager, and has hub-motors that are rain-proof, imo. Someone should try parking a velo on a sidewalk.
Costco sells a kick scooter with front and rear shocks for only C$119.