The hubless electric motorcycle with sci-fi style and a great name

  News, Rassegna Stampa
image_pdfimage_print

Modern cars are riddled with sensors looking in every direction, most taxed with one simple duty: keep you safe.

Motorcycles are a lot more simple. Riders are literally hung out in the wind, left with little more than their reflexes, skills, and situational awareness to keep them safe. Even essential safety tech like anti-lock brakes and traction control are relatively new additions to the two-wheel scene.

But that’s changing, and it looks like Finland’s Verge Motorcycles (no relation) could lead the pack with the most advanced rider safety system on two wheels when the Verge TS Ultra launches later this year.

The TS looks like nothing else on the road because it is like nothing else on the road. It’s electric, for starters, making it still a rare thing in the world of motorcycles, but its performance is even more radical. It has a whopping 201 horsepower and 885 pound-feet of torque, almost twice as much as a Corvette E-Ray

That torque comes from an unusual source. When coming up with the initial design for a motorcycle in 2018, Verge Motorcycles CTO Marko Lehtimäki said that the team was unhappy with the few electric motorcycles on the market. 

He said that most electric motorcycle designs simply replace the basic layout of a gas-powered motorcycle, swapping an engine for a motor and a gas tank for a battery. “We thought that cannot be optimal,” he said.

Placing the battery high in the frame was one particular concern. “These batteries are very heavy,” he said. “The center of gravity gets high and these are top-heavy and not very enjoyable experiences compared to traditional motorcycling.”

It has a whopping 201 horsepower and 885 pound-feet of torque, almost twice as much as a Corvette E-Ray.

Verge Motorcycle’s engineers knew they needed to put the battery down in the bottom of the frame, keeping the center of gravity as low as possible. But, by dropping the battery to the base, they filled up the space usually occupied by a motor. 

“We came to a conclusion that we would need to move the motor outside of the main chassis, out of the body of the motorcycle,” he said. So they decided to try something different: putting the motor inside the rear wheel. 

In-wheel electric motors are not exactly rare. In fact, they’re common in the e-bike scene, found on options like the VanMoof S4 or the BirdBike. The TS Ultra’s motor, though, is something different. 

It’s a hubless ring design, which means you can put your hand right through the center of the wheel. This creates a radical look and while it does have some drawbacks, namely adding a lot of weight hanging off the rear suspension, Lehtimäki said the practical benefits of that battery placement more than outweigh it.

“We did a prototype, and let’s say that was not a very easy path,” Lehtimäki said. “Even when we got the prototype working, people thought that we were crazy, and many were saying that that would never work in real life. But we just were very convinced this is the future, and if we can make this work, it will change everything.”

The result is an inadvertent head-turner. “We didn’t start from ‘Let’s create something that looks like a Tron bike,’ we started from how can we make a better motorcycle with a completely redesigned EV architecture,” he said. “The answer was this ring motor.”

While the look of the bike is unique, the way the bike will look back at the world is equally novel. At this year’s CES in Las Vegas, Verge Motorcycles will unveil a new sensor package to be included with the TS Ultra, the top trim of the company’s debut motorcycle. The company calls it Starmatter Vision.