Alternative Transport

This Electric Trike carries same amount of groceries as the trunk of a small car

It just takes 2.5 hours of charging time to propel this electric trike for 37 miles at a speed of roughly 14 miles per hour. It’s also easy to mix in old fashioned peddle power to make the bike go even further. The handy grocery carrier box is located at the rear of the e-trike and has a max load capacity of a whopping 88 pounds. Great for city travel, this electric trike is simple to park and fantastic for getting around in confined urban spaces. It even folds up and packs away neatly, making it ideal for those living in apartments.

Alternative Transportation Thoughts 

When it comes to saving the environment one can’t help but think of all the pollution caused by the burning of fossils fuels. When you think about it almost everything has a carbon footprint, from the apple you buy at the grocery store to that long haul flight to Thailand. Almost everything we do and consume is linked to fossil fuels in one way or another.

Electric technologies have come a long way in the last few years. Now you can buy electric cars that rival their gasoline models, ride electric trains, scoot along on ebike scooters, and even ride electric motorcycles that go up to 180kph, all on clean green electricity.

It’s true that electric power is not always clean. You can create electricity through burning coal or running a gasoline generator, but you can also create it from wind, solar, tidal, geothermal, and other natural and renewable resources. You’re free to choose where it comes from, and most of the time a little goes a long way.

Some of the newest technologies are really great at taking you far for not much input. Some ebikes can now take you up to 100km on just pennies of electricity. Pretty impressive when you consider the cost of gasoline these days (and we’re not just talking financial cost, but also health, environmental, and political implications).

20110911-064931.jpg
Recently we got a new Ebike in at the Newfoundland Electric Bike store that is truly in a world of it’s own. It’s called the Sprinter and it’s designed and made by a Canadian Company called Electrowheels . When we got our first 2012 electric bicycle models in this fall everyone at the Ebike shop was blown away at how solid, nimble, and powerful this new generation of Ebike is (not to mention fun). The new generation of battery, controller, and motor made the bike perform like no other we had ever seen. Watching our Ebike tech Jonah glide effortlessly up and down the steepest of hills in St. John’s really reaffirmed my faith in this new technology. I could see that things were progressing and changing in the world of electric transport at a much faster pace than any of us had imagined. In a town where the roads are dominated by gas guzzling giants, the Sprinter fit right in, keeping up with traffic and defiantly climbing the steep hills of St. John’s. It was as if it were saying “look at me, I can do everything you can do, but I do it without burning fuel”. It instantly made me smile and reaffirmed my commitment to the industry I am in.

Very easy rider: an electric bike adventure

Our author muscles up to pal Harley Dave astride a Daymak electric bike. — Photos by Rick Barnes/Special to The Telegram
Published on August 17, 2011
Rick Barnes
Special to The Telegram
Topics : Honda 50 , Beach Boys , Harley-Davidson , Prescott , Signal Hill , Waterford Valley
It’s spooky, being on a two-wheeled transport that makes only a humming sound and requires no physical effort to keep up with late afternoon downtown St. John’s traffic. It gives the operator freedom to gawk around, and that’s what many of the adventurers who seek out Jasmine Kean’s Newfoundland Electric Bikes (www.nlebike.com) want to do — rent an electric bike and spend an afternoon taking in the sights around our old harbour town.
Kean, musician and folklorist-cum-entrepreneur, and her partner, Martin Hanzalek, have been selling and renting electric bikes from their storefront at the east corner of Prescott and Water since May. Kean let me take one of her scooters for a spin — despite the dreary weather, there weren’t many models left on the floor.
“Some of our busiest days have been days like this,” says Kean. Many of her rental customers want to take a ride around Quidi Vidi, Signal Hill, or Cape Spear — without sweating the hills. “Especially, like, husband and wife teams, or boyfriend and girlfriend teams, they seem to come as tourists, rent a couple, go around and look around … I’d say most of our customers are between 40 and 50 for sure. That seems to be the generation that we are renting to right now.”
The Grand Banks RDF machine is working overtime to protect us from the dammed UV rays, so I head west to the shelter of the Waterford Valley. My little Daymak scooter, known locally as the “Avalon Special”, closely resembles the Torino model available on the mainland — but a vehicle called Avalon Special seems much more appropriate for humming through the chilly mist. The Avalon is a 500-watt hybrid outfitted with bicycle pedals and it easily hauls along my 72 kg bulk at 30 km/h.
Daymak is a hot Canadian company founded in 2001 by award-winning entrepreneur Yeg Baiocchi. According to the company website, Baiocchi, while searching for a gift for her daughter, realized there was a market for electric scooters in Canada and her company now produces a line of electric two-wheel vehicles, as well as “mobility scooters” and golf carts that utilize the super efficient Daymak Drive system.
The suspension on my bike is loose for my taste, making the ride bouncy in places, but the tires are wide enough to roll over the usual edge of street obstacles, like recessed storm drains and the wrinkled asphalt that hugs the curbs of Waterford Bridge Road. The brakes are effective, but you might want to keep in mind the right hand lever is for the front wheel — like a motorcycle. Your feet are freed up to use the bicycle-type pedals, so the rear wheel brake is operated by the left handlebar lever. This makes sense, but when pedalling bicycle style, I tend to think and feel bicycle, making the handlebar brakes reverse to the standard bicycle configuration. You need to use both, and it wasn’t a problem on the dry or damp pavement I encountered, but at one point I managed to lock up the front wheel in a bit of loose gravel, and it skidded, so that kicked up my heart rate a bit.
I keep to the right of the west bound lanes and the downtown traffic is patient with me. I behave as a cyclist more than a motorcyclist, even taking to the empty sidewalk on a couple of occasions to dodge parked cars, avoiding swerving too far into traffic and slowing the flow. The rear-view mirrors on my model are swept upward, and it is sometimes tricky to get a fix on traffic overtaking me. The mirrors are, however, outfitted with speakers and a sound system so you can take your favourite tunes with you when you go for a spin.
The Avalon doesn’t have a speedometer. There are a set of four LEDs, all lit, indicating full battery charge. The bench seat is comfortable, the twist grip throttle feels familiar, I have head and tail lights, horn and directional signals that have an accompanying audible beep — I guess so you won’t forget to turn them off. The bike is turned on with a key, and there is a sophisticated locking and (very loud) alarm system.
The underbone style reminds me of the venerable Honda 50 — the best-selling vehicle in history. The 50 cc Honda was celebrated in 1964 by Mike Wilson and the screeching Beach Boys with, “Little Honda.” Who could forget that catchy tune, “ … it’s not a big motorcycle, just a groovy little motorbike,” etc. It went right to No. 1 in Sweden. But that was a time when gas was cheap and we had fresh air to burn; the vehicles of the future may be more like Kean’s little “hummer.”
In a few minutes, I reach Dodge City on Topsail Road and whiz by a line of traffic waiting to turn left onto Dunn’s Lane. I make the left turn before the light change, roll over the bridge and head west on Park Avenue toward the house of my biker buddy, Dave.
It is difficult to equate the Avalon’s power rating of 500 watts into more familiar terms. In this part of the world, we are used to rating our vehicles in terms of engine displacement and horsepower. My buddy Dave’s 102-cubic-inch Harley-Davidson, for example, may deliver 65 hp (on a good day) and the aforementioned iconic Honda 50 of the 1960s put out less than 4 hp.
The Avalon Special is driven by an electric motor powered by an old-fashioned rechargeable 48-volt lead-acid battery. There is no fuel consumed — no displacement to rate. The 500-watt power rating might work out to .5 hp — similar to a Maytag washer. But yet, it easily hums along with me on board.
When I release the twist throttle and start pedaling bicycle style, the effect — although not immediate — is impressive. After eight-10 pedal cranks, I feel a surge of power from the rear wheel drive motor and the bike lunges forward. Cranking the pedals takes little effort, so it seems like I am getting extra power for nothing. The pedals are mounted low on the frame and when a pedal reaches its lowest point of travel it’s very close to the pavement and sometimes bumps the ground on a turn.
Dave’s first reaction to the sight of my electric iron in his Harley-worn driveway is laughter — of the derisive kind, I believe. But, as always, his curiosity about machines gets the better of him and he accompanies me on his Harley for a little turn around the Pearl. But Dave is not laughing when I silently pull away from the stop sign at the end of his street — well, maybe he is. I can’t see him in my mirror. Dave tells me I’m doing about 32 km/h when he rumbles up alongside me on Ruth Avenue.
It soon becomes clear, however, the Avalon Special is getting all the attention. The pointing and head-turning is all about my ride. No one asks Dave where he got his shiny copper-coloured Harley, but one young woman does stick her head out her car window to ask me where she can rent an Avalon.
RNC Sgt. Paul Murphy, head of traffic services for the Northeast Avalon, says the electric bikes have generated a lot of queries to his department, too. No complaints or scrapes, mind you, just people curious about the appearance of motorized bikes without licence plates.
“You don’t have to register them but they should still behave like a vehicle,” says Murphy. “They should stay in a traffic lane same as a motor vehicle would and use their indicators to change direction, stop for all lights … obey crosswalks, stop to let pedestrians cross. They won’t break any speed limits, so we don’t have to worry about that.”
Dave is not about to trade in his Milwaukee for an Avalon, but he suggests, because the bikes are light and fuel-free, it would be neat to have a couple tucked away in an RV for exploring. After I’m done upstaging Harley Dave, we head off in different directions — Dave with his twitching v-twin power plant dancing around as if trying to escape the confines of its frame, and me, humming up Commonwealth Avenue to head east on Topsail, effortlessly and emission-free.
I covered about 24 km and climbed a couple of good hills on my circuit out to the Pearl and back, and it was a terrific ride. The only anxious moments on the trip were a few seconds on Military Road near the top of Garrison, when a Metrobus overtaking me confined me to a narrower than comfortable corridor between its hind wheels and the curb.
When I park the bike at Kean’s shop, I am astounded to discover the battery display still indicates full charge! The battery is not depleted, and I don’t feel as if I physically contributed to the trip at all, so where is the energy coming from? Is there a dynamo humming in the mysterious Daymak Drive?
But before you make an Avalon hum, Murphy, 28-year veteran of the RNC and a cyclist himself, advises electric bicycle riders to ensure their helmets fit properly and recommends they take some time to familiarize themselves with the bikes before they hit the road. And he has advice for operators of more conventional vehicles, too:
“People on two wheel vehicles have a right to be on the roadways, too. The Highway Traffic Act says they do. And we have to learn how to live on the streets together. … A lot of people these days, they’re always in a hurry … that’s no good. You have to drive carefully and drive with patience. Watch out for everyone else.”

copyright 2011 Martin Hanzalek

2 thoughts on “Alternative Transport

  1. I was just down to the Electric Bike shop and got a chance to meet Jasmine Kean, Martin Hanzalek, and Jonah the ebike tech (I cannot remember his last name but he was super nice). I was really surprised at the difference between the 2011 ebikes we used this summer and the 2012 ebikes that are now on display at the NL Ebike Showroom. While I am personally not a big fan of the new digital displays (I prefer the old school needle gauges like on the retro motorcycle style ebikes) I was really impressed with the new controller and motor packages. It seems like the new bikes are ten times as powerful but when you look at the motor it is still just 500 watts and the batteries are 48 volts. Why do the new models seem so much more powerful if the watts and volts are the same as last year’s model?

  2. Pingback: Resources used to build "green" cars

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s