

wineboyrider wrote:A 250cc scooter or motorcycle is necessary when you have a lot of interstate or freeway driving when the posted speed limit is 65 mph or higher, but I get by fine in traffic as the ride to the big city of Alamogordo, NM and back is roughly 30 miles round trip, but the highest posted speed is 60 mph![]()

cbr shadow wrote:Several have posted about ebikes being the best value transport, but as I'm building mine I'm starting to think it's not! Unless of course it completely replaces a car (not really possible in the Chicago area due to winters).
I'm probably forgetting a few things, but that's just the original purchase cost which is $2655. This doesn't count any of my time researching the site, installing, etc.. It's fun for me but I'm just saying it's not like I just went out and bought it. Point is that even if nothing fails on it I have to save 664 gallons of gas before the bike pays for itself (assuming electricity is 'free'), which in my car getting 31mpg avg means that I have to take the etrike 20,577 miles before it pays for itself in gas savings over the car.
This doesn't factor in that any miles on the bike saves the car from being driven/worn of course.


cbr shadow wrote:Several have posted about ebikes being the best value transport, ...
SamTexas wrote:Why bother with the cost comparison between a small, reliable, used ICE scooter and a car? The scooter wins hand down and by a large margin.
The more interesting comparison is between the above scooter and an ebike. The scooter beats the ebike too.
Bottom line: If COST IS THE DETERMINING FACTOR, nothing beats a small, used and reliable scooter. That's practically any Honda, Suzuki or Yamaha with a 100 to 250cc 4-cycle engine.

dumbass wrote:cbr shadow wrote:Several have posted about ebikes being the best value transport, but as I'm building mine I'm starting to think it's not! Unless of course it completely replaces a car (not really possible in the Chicago area due to winters).
I'm probably forgetting a few things, but that's just the original purchase cost which is $2655. This doesn't count any of my time researching the site, installing, etc.. It's fun for me but I'm just saying it's not like I just went out and bought it. Point is that even if nothing fails on it I have to save 664 gallons of gas before the bike pays for itself (assuming electricity is 'free'), which in my car getting 31mpg avg means that I have to take the etrike 20,577 miles before it pays for itself in gas savings over the car.
This doesn't factor in that any miles on the bike saves the car from being driven/worn of course.
Your points are all valid. There are different reasons for every ebike build. Personally, I would never consider an ebike as a replacement for a car. In fact I rarely use my bike on the roadway unless I'm going to or from the forest preserves. But a lot of people consider an ebike as a great replacement for a car. And they are also getting the exercise as well. Being that we ar both located in the Chicago land area I can't imagin ever considering riding a bike in our winters.
To your point even my $550 cycle I had to add $150 in title and plate plus $280 for good insurance. So if I just consider the cost of the bike at $550 I would have to ride 4262 mile before breaking even. But during that mileage I burned about 61 gals of gas or $244 again. So I guess you could add on another 2000+ miles I'd have to ride.
Bottom line is; if your only reason for having an ebike, scooter or cycle is to save money it can be difficult for some to justify the expense. But most of us also consider other things like the exercise and even just the enjoyment of the ride.
Bob





Ykick wrote:Trivial bit of data but in NYC electricity costs about $0.29 cents per kWh. Not going into all the math but works out to $0.02 cents per mile for relatively mild 30A eBike. Chicago's probably not quite that high electrical product/delivery but I wouldn't be surprised if $0.20-25 cents/kWh? Most places safe to count on $0.01 cent/mile. Not a lot by gasoline comparison but when you ride electric 200-250 miles per month, you do notice it on the power bill.
I rode my GL1100 in Chicago for the mild winter '97-98. One 4F night was just about my "give up" point. Replacing a car is hard and so is replacing public transit in some cases. Only you know what you like and how your budget adds up...

dkw12002 wrote:remember a month or so ago when a biker hit a man and killed him in San Francisco. There were many hundreds of comments from people who hated people on bicycles having nothing to do with this incident at all.


veloman wrote:That's seems really expensive, when my car at 35mpg and $2 gas a while ago cost 6 cents per mile. An ebike should be wayyy cheap than 1/3rd the cost per mile of a car, even when gas was cheap.
At 20watt hour/mile it should be something like:
400watt/hr / .8 charger efficiency = 1/2 kwh for 20 miles. at 30 cents/kwh, that's 15cents/20mile or 1.33 cents per mile. But if you ride fast, 2 cents per mile could happen. The thing is, everywhere I've lived power is around 10-11 cents/kwh. So it's 1/3rd that cost.

veloman wrote:Ykick wrote:
That's seems really expensive, when my car at 35mpg and $2 gas a while ago cost 6 cents per mile. An ebike should be wayyy cheap than 1/3rd the cost per mile of a car, even when gas was cheap.
At 20watt hour/mile it should be something like:
400watt/hr / .8 charger efficiency = 1/2 kwh for 20 miles. at 30 cents/kwh, that's 15cents/20mile or 1.33 cents per mile. But if you ride fast, 2 cents per mile could happen. The thing is, everywhere I've lived power is around 10-11 cents/kwh. So it's 1/3rd that cost.



StudEbiker wrote:SamTexas, have you done a cost analysis somewhere that shows an ICE scooter to be cheaper to use as transportation than an e-bike? I find your assertion very hard to believe and I am wondering how you came about your opinion.

SamTexas wrote:StudEbiker wrote:SamTexas, have you done a cost analysis somewhere that shows an ICE scooter to be cheaper to use as transportation than an e-bike? I find your assertion very hard to believe and I am wondering how you came about your opinion.
SE: It's not an opinion. It's actual real life total operating cost of my 1988 Suzuki GN250 motorcycle. When comparing it with the ebike, I made one assumption: The wear and tear of the ebike battery is 10cents/mile. If that assumption is reasonable for you then I can show you the rest of the data. If not, it's pointless.

Ykick wrote:veloman wrote:That's seems really expensive, when my car at 35mpg and $2 gas a while ago cost 6 cents per mile. An ebike should be wayyy cheap than 1/3rd the cost per mile of a car, even when gas was cheap.
At 20watt hour/mile it should be something like:
400watt/hr / .8 charger efficiency = 1/2 kwh for 20 miles. at 30 cents/kwh, that's 15cents/20mile or 1.33 cents per mile. But if you ride fast, 2 cents per mile could happen. The thing is, everywhere I've lived power is around 10-11 cents/kwh. So it's 1/3rd that cost.
Can't trust me, huh? I wanted to save myself the trouble but here goes:
My last ConEd bill is/was $58.96 for 184 kWh. So my post was incorrect - it's actually 32 cents per kWh. Of course, they hide it using Supply charges, Delivery Charges, Surcharges, SBC/RPS charges, sales tax, etc. Would you like to see the bill? Total electricity charges = $58.96, Electricity used = 184 kWh
My usual commute is almost exactly 8 miles round trip. My batteries need roughly 333Wh from the charger after a typical commute. My charger's connected to a Kill-A-Watt meter and measures almost exactly 500Wh per charge cycle. Basically using .5kWh from the AC outlet to power myself for 8 miles. 1/2 of a 32 cent kWh = 16 cents. 16 divide by 8 = 2 cents/mile.
Just because you may not have experienced insane electricity prices doesn't mean it's not true...


SamTexas wrote:On this forum, I think most people use RC LiCo. Anyway, here's an estimate by NeilP who uses NanoTech RC LiCo:
http://www.endless-sphere.com/forums/vi ... 15#p595360


John in CR wrote:Wrong again. http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=6098

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