LiveWire LiveWire Embarks on Epic 13,000 Mile Journey
#1
LiveWire Embarks on Epic 13,000 Mile Journey
LiveWire Embarks on Epic 13,000 Mile Journey
By Brett Foote
This new show depicts the epic journey of two friends riding together for the first time in a decade.
By Brett Foote
This new show depicts the epic journey of two friends riding together for the first time in a decade.
#2
"But the point of the exercise is to prove that these sorts of trips can be enjoyed with the latest cutting-edge technology, and without creating much if any pollution along the way."
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
#3
"But the point of the exercise is to prove that these sorts of trips can be enjoyed with the latest cutting-edge technology, and without creating much if any pollution along the way."
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
#4
#5
Anyone who thinks these things are emissions friendly are sadly mistaken. More political BS than anything else. One needs to look at the total emission from producing the bike and all it's components until it's retired and destroyed. Anyone think that all the electricity use was made with no emissions? How about battery manufacturing and disposal, the list goes on and on. What an electric vehicle does is shift the emissions to another source, it does not get rid of it at all! Until we can produce energy with no emissions one needs to stop looking at what the political BS is telling you and look at the total emissions required from birth to death of a vehicle and all the energy production and distribution emissions to see if it is reducing anything at all. In most cases that have been studied to date there is no emissions reduction happening at all, from its gasoline counter part. Someday maybe but not today or anytime in the near future.
The following users liked this post:
Jeff Dodson (11-25-2020)
#6
Anyone who thinks these things are emissions friendly are sadly mistaken. More political BS than anything else. One needs to look at the total emission from producing the bike and all it's components until it's retired and destroyed. Anyone think that all the electricity use was made with no emissions? How about battery manufacturing and disposal, the list goes on and on. What an electric vehicle does is shift the emissions to another source, it does not get rid of it at all! Until we can produce energy with no emissions one needs to stop looking at what the political BS is telling you and look at the total emissions required from birth to death of a vehicle and all the energy production and distribution emissions to see if it is reducing anything at all. In most cases that have been studied to date there is no emissions reduction happening at all, from its gasoline counter part. Someday maybe but not today or anytime in the near future.
I wouldn't buy one because it had no emissions. I would buy one because they are an absolute blast to ride.
#8
#9
"But the point of the exercise is to prove that these sorts of trips can be enjoyed with the latest cutting-edge technology, and without creating much if any pollution along the way."
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
Yes, they can be enjoyed if you have a whole production team scouting charging points in advance, arranging situations your bikes just so happen to be uniquely qualified to handle, and are doing it all on your expense account. Also not creating any pollution because I'm sure that entire production crew is also travelling in EV's, aren't they?
Not for nothing, but there was some kid out of Naples, FL who decided to ride to Sturgis on one. Solo. No camera crews, no backup people, no spare chargers lying around. He just got the app that let you find a charger and went. Only part of his trip where he needed to sit around waiting for the 110V charger to do its 11h magic was South Dakota itself.
During the journey he took the bike to the dragstrip and smoked the car he was running against.
I find that a much more interesting ride than some publicity stunt featuring Junkies and Jedis.
It's doable. And you're going to see more people do it. Frankly I find a quiet fast twisties ride in the wilderness a different kind of fun and one worth buying into as well as your classic Get your motor riding, heavy metal thunder etc. etc. etc.