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Stark Varg has their owners manual on line

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Fran K:
Alta had their owner's manual online and I have it saved somewhere.  Wandering around the Stark site I found a link to their owner's manual.   https://s3-stark-prod-public.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/manuals/varg_owners_manual.pdf  The part about storage is hard to believe for someone that has used Makita batteries and stored them in unheated places, they can be depleted in under 10 minutes on a leaf blower or chain saw, get real hot as only cooling is on the charger.

At any rate there is no Stark section on here.  I doubt Damon or Lightning have put out their owner's manual.  I don't really want to play put a deposit and then they can come out heavier than expected as is the case here.  If they make a model that is DOT approved, I guess I will be willing to go heavier than my ktm freeride but 240  pouinds is about all I want to go for a strictly dirt motorcycle.  These electric bikes have no neutral and getting unstuck pushing backwards is unlike an ice one with neutral.

MVetter:

--- Quote from: Fran K on July 30, 2023, 07:17:40 PM ---The part about storage is hard to believe for someone that has used Makita batteries and stored them in unheated places, they can be depleted in under 10 minutes on a leaf blower or chain saw, get real hot as only cooling is on the charger.

--- End quote ---


Well let me take a look and see if anything seems amiss...


--- Quote ---Make sure the storage temperature is
between 0 and 30 ºC, with a preferred
storage temperature of 10 ºC.
• Make sure the motorcycle is clean, see
§§Cleaning the Stark VARG after useCleaning the Stark VARG after use
• Make sure that the battery charge
is between 30% and 50%.
• Check the charge of the battery
regularly. If the charge drops below
30%, recharge the battery to 50%.
• Store the bike in a dry
area free from frost.
--- End quote ---

That all looks exactly as expected. What is throwing you off? Also would you like a copy of a Lightning Strike manual? There's some interesting clauses.

TheRan:
Anyone know what they mean by a "technical life span"? They say 500 running hours, so even at the 68mph top speed that's only 34k miles. I can't imagine a single non-consumable component of that bike wouldn't last well past that.

I actually thought it would be faster than that too, they bill it as a competition bike that's more powerful than a 450 but those will do well over 90mph. Not on a track perhaps, I've never been on a dirt track but still 68mph seems a little low.

Fran K:

--- Quote from: MVetter on July 30, 2023, 11:10:16 PM ---
--- Quote from: Fran K on July 30, 2023, 07:17:40 PM ---The part about storage is hard to believe for someone that has used Makita batteries and stored them in unheated places, they can be depleted in under 10 minutes on a leaf blower or chain saw, get real hot as only cooling is on the charger.

--- End quote ---


Well let me take a look and see if anything seems amiss...


--- Quote ---Make sure the storage temperature is
between 0 and 30 ºC, with a preferred
storage temperature of 10 ºC.
• Make sure the motorcycle is clean, see
§§Cleaning the Stark VARG after useCleaning the Stark VARG after use
• Make sure that the battery charge
is between 30% and 50%.
• Check the charge of the battery
regularly. If the charge drops below
30%, recharge the battery to 50%.
• Store the bike in a dry
area free from frost.
--- End quote ---

That all looks exactly as expected. What is throwing you off? Also would you like a copy of a Lightning Strike manual? There's some interesting clauses.

--- End quote ---

What is throwing me off is the check it every two weeks to make sure that it has not gone below 30% on a different page.  Does cold below 0 Celsius really do harm if it is just stored like that at night  in the a cold place where frost does not stick to anything due to humidity?

Fran K:

--- Quote from: TheRan on July 31, 2023, 12:51:25 AM ---Anyone know what they mean by a "technical life span"? They say 500 running hours, so even at the 68mph top speed that's only 34k miles. I can't imagine a single non-consumable component of that bike wouldn't last well past that.

I actually thought it would be faster than that too, they bill it as a competition bike that's more powerful than a 450 but those will do well over 90mph. Not on a track perhaps, I've never been on a dirt track but still 68mph seems a little low.

--- End quote ---

They have a youtube video on their site and it's internet address if it won't play, like for me.     If it makes 80hp then it is most efficient at 40 hp and that is where it is going to be used most.see second 55 to 60.  I am sure it will go more than 68 mph with different sprockets and tires appropriate for the terrain. 

Electric bikes don't really have an answer in a sense to 5th and 6th gear on an ice bike at least on the small end like my bike vs a 125 2 stroke or an Alta supermoto vs a 650ktm single supermoto.

My guess on the first part is that when you use aluminum there is a cycles to failure design consideration.  The linkage  puts stresses on it's attachment point to the frame and the swingarm pivot.  500 hours might be too much at the top level of competition.  Then the magnesium honeycomb the cells are in is stressed not sure how much compared to the linkage stresses.

found this a couple of days ago   
minutes 9 and 20 for the charts

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