Home
News
Concepts
A Team of College Students Built a 228-HP, 186-MPH Fully-Electric Superbike
MotoRidersUniverse
A Team of College Students Built a 228-HP, 186-MPH Fully-Electric Superbike
05 May 2022 Concepts
Sponsored by Moto Animals

With the world currently transitioning toward a future with exclusively electric production vehicles, universities from around the planet have been preparing the next generation of mechanical and electrical engineers with hands-on projects that allow students to test the limits of this rapidly-advancing technology. Based in the Netherlands, one such outfit is Electric Superbike Twente which has just revealed a fourth-generation fully electric superbike known as the Delta-XE.

2527456273f2ee29565.jpg

Made by a team of 15 students at the University of Twente in Enschede, the Delta-XE is constructed around a CrMoB steel trellis frame and swing-arm courtesy of Bakker Framebouw that have been paired with an inverted Öhlins fork with ceramic reinforced carbon fiber fork uppers and a TTX mono-shock. Riding on Marchesini forged aluminum wheels, the bike also boasts GP-style switchgear, an AiM MXL 2 race display, radial-mount four-pot calipers, and a full suite of carbon fiber bodywork borrowed from Suter Racing’s track-only MMX 500 two-stroke superbike.

Powering this cutting-edge track weapon is a proprietary 170-kW (228-hp) PMAC motor that’s linked to a Cascadia Motion controller and a 13.5-kWh, 800-volt Lithium polymer battery. This custom powertrain produces 590ft-lbs of torque at the rear wheel, allowing it to achieve sub-three-second 0-60mph runs and a top speed of 186mph. In total, the Delta-XE weighs in at just 485lbs, too.

Though the Delta-XE is merely an educational project, the electric superbike nonetheless points to a future that, while lacking internal combustion engines, will almost certainly include some extremely high-performance motorcycles.

LEARN MORE: HERE

#Moto #Concept #Bike #Sportbike

0 2.2K
Comments
No CommentsNo Comments yet. You can write the first
Please Log In or install the app. Comments can be posted only by registered users.
Related
Home
Menu
Posting
Notify
Sign In
Profile
Content creation
Search
See More