Cycle News

Cycle News 2019 Issue 11 March 19

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOL. 56 ISSUE 11 MARCH 19, 2019 P105 ment on the Strike's brakes and suspension, since the hardware carried by this early prototype won't reach volume production. But a close look at the seat/ handlebar/footpeg triangle is needed, and Richard Hatfield realizes this. However, he's got the Strike's essential architecture dead right, though physically smaller and with more accessible performance from the half-as- powerful motor, it feels chuckable and agile in a way the heavier, much bulkier, and less nimble LS-218 could never be, despite the Strike sharing the same 24º rake/105.3mm trail steering ge- ometry as the bigger bike. But if the Strike's chassis package needs some work, the motor is already just about spot on. After booting up the bike and going live, you must be ready for the traditional Lightning arm- lengthening acceleration, so hold on tight. Very tight! Acceleration isn't as absolutely monstrous as on the LS-218, but thanks to the instant dose of substantial torque on tap as soon as you wind open the throttle, it's still mighty im- pressive and far superior from rest to almost any other sport bike of whatever capacity. Okay, absolute top speed won't be anywhere as fast as the LS-218, but that's not the point of this real world E-motorcycle, which represents a new departure for Lightning—away from the outright performance, towards real-world rideability. "We're targeting the 650- 800cc sector of gas-powered bikes with the Strike family of models," says Hatfield. "So this is our mid-price, mid-performance, middleweight model with half the outright power and around 18% less battery than the LS-218—al- though we can also configure it with larger high-energy batteries for extra range. So we'll have several options on that, and the same with the charger. Our base model has a 3.3kWh Level Two system, which takes roughly three and a half hours to charge from five percent to 95 percent, but we'll also offer a 12 kWh char- ger which will reduce recharging time to roughly an hour, or we can use a DC fast charger which brings it down to 40 minutes. We'll be giving each of our cus- tomers the opportunity to specify the exact overall package they're looking for, which in most cases depends on their likely intended use for the motorcycle." Meanwhile,, the Strike proto- type delivered thrilling accelera- tion coupled with controllability at low speeds, and especially exiting a tight turn, with no trace of the brusque pickup mid-turn from a closed throttle of some E-bikes. The fact that the build of power and especially torque all the way to the 15,000 rpm limiter is so smooth and linear, with no spikes in the delivery ready to get the rear Pirelli unhooked via a sudden spurt of power as on an ICE Supersport, makes it feasible to exploit the reserves of perfor- mance of the Lightning motor. Designed in California, constructed in China.

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