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I would try a Electrified Trike if they made one. But would have to get more miles per charge than 130 miles..![]()
130 miles :Shrug: me thinks that every time you stop and go you burn power :xzqxz: every time you roll the throttle you burn power :Shrug: how easy do you think it will be to find a place to plug in and recharge on the road :Shrug: maybe a good idea :Shrug: but maybe a little ahead of it's time :Shrug: 130 miles, I don't think so![]()
Image how bad this will hurt harley & the aftermarket industry? no more exhaust upgrades , no more high flow air cleaners , no more cam changes ,no more thousand of dollars spent on dyno tuning,speedy dry sales will drop to a all time low, animal vets will suffer from not having sick dogs & cats from leaking antifreeze, the list goes on & on ???? JUST A THOUGHT![]()
Yip, it's all over the news here in Wisc! Apparently the "Project Live Wire" bike is going to be at the next Bike Night (every Thurs night) for people to look at it. Harley is making it very clear that the bike is not in production, YET! They also said that a few lucky people will actually get to ride the bike and give their feedback to the people who designed it. They say it sounds like a turbine engine when taking off, no shifting and accelerates very well. I imagine it has some kind of centrifugal clutch?.?. Come on up and give it a try!![]()
View attachment 20666 :xszpv:The tag and release program
Now I understand why they will unveil the electric motorcycle in new York.
Has Harley Davidson jumped on the band wagon?
NEW YORK—In an effort to more closely observe the group’s buying habits and personal behaviors, a growing number of corporations are turning to tag and release programs to study American consumers, sources confirmed Friday.
According to reports, multinationals such as Kraft, General Electric, Goodyear, and Apple have embraced the technique of tracking down potential customers in their natural habitats of department stores and supermarkets, forcibly tranquilizing them as they shop, and then fitting them with electronic tracking devices that allow marketing departments to keep a detailed record of individuals’ every movement and purchasing decision.
“In recent weeks, we have employed our tag and release initiative to sedate and earmark consumers in several Costco parking lots and Best Buy television aisles, which has already yielded valuable data from numerous middle-class family units,” said Sony market researcher Nathan McElroy, whose team gathers data on the consumer population by attaching radio-transponder collars to specimens across all age groups and income levels. “Today we subdued and chipped a beautiful white male earning $60,000 annually whose subsequent actions—where he eats, where he works, whether he purchases extended warranties on electronic devices—will give us important insights into his demographic.”
“We’re really starting to get a clear idea of just what sales promotions and big-ticket expenditures make these fascinating creatures tick,” he continued.
Representatives from several Fortune 500 companies described to reporters a delicate process in which marketing associates journey to such varied field sites as Marshalls, OfficeMax, and Bed Bath & Beyond, where they lie in wait behind a row of shopping carts or a promotional cardboard cutout. Once a desirable target moves into view, a member of the marketing team reportedly attempts to immobilize it by firing a tranquilizer dart into its neck or haunches before it can panic and skitter off into another aisle. The unconscious consumer is then fitted with a small, subdermal acoustic tag that is synced to the subject’s credit cards, allowing marketers to both physically and financially track their quarries.
Claiming that every effort is taken to employ humane handling procedures and inflict minimal trauma, marketing associates stressed that consumers always wake up in the same clothing department or mini mall in which they were found, and most obliviously resume their browsing of store shelves within 30 minutes of being sedated.
Researchers affirmed they have become increasingly interested in valuable targets such as college graduates who allot more than $500 per month to discretionary purchases, saying they have become fascinated by the group’s herd-like movements to Panera Bread and IKEA as well as their ritual use of products such as Swiffers and tablets. By monitoring these consumers as they feed, groom, use their rewards cards, and mate, marketers acknowledged they have amassed a tremendous amount of useful knowledge.
“Just last month we collar-tagged a prime specimen of a variety we’d been attempting to capture for a very long time,” said BMW marketing executive Samantha Barlow, referring to a suburban mother in her late 40s who was found gathering bunches of watercress and beet greens at a Whole Foods, where her precise weekly route through the aisles has now been recorded and analyzed. “And we finally have geolocators implanted in several dozen young professionals aged 25 to 35, whose consumption of products such as Stella Artois, Hugo Boss apparel, and designer colognes suggest they’ll provide us with fruitful data for years to come.”
“It’s important that we tag them early in the development of their buying habits,” Barlow added. “Obviously, once they reach 65, they become useless for our purposes and we remove their tags, or just let them chew them off.”
Despite the success of their tracking programs, researchers admitted their work has been hindered by limits in their methodology, noting that they are unable to observe any quantifiable activity from as many as a quarter of their tagged targets who remain sedentary almost around the clock and rarely leave their dens. Marketers noted these larger, slower specimens must often be hit with two or three darts before they can be safely approached.
“A large portion of our targets are fast food consumers, and you’ll lose 10 or 12 percent of those each year, usually to heart disease,” said Jonathan Lockhart, an independent marketing consultant. “You hate to see that, but the upside is that we get useful data we can then turn around and sell to pharmaceutical companies.”
“What’s bad news for Burger King is great news for Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, and Pfizer,” he added.![]()
I would try a Electrified Trike if they made one. But would have to get more miles per charge than 130 miles..![]()
They already make an "Electrified trike", it's called a Hoveround..:laugh: Here's the link to them
http://www.hoveround.com/power-chair-accessories/motorized-scooters/3-wheel-power-scooters
Sorry, I had to do it....
Bubba
There are tons of charging stations. There is a whole network. Our little town has 4. There is no clutch. Y do u need one. Your electric drill doesn't have one. If they can team up with Testla and get use of the super chargers they can go X country. Fast is not the word for it. The ICE Harley is a Slug compared to it. 0 to 60 in 4 sec. Full torque at 1 RPM if you can hold on. Not for everyone. Most Harley riders are bar hoppers around here. Some don't put more than 500 a year on their bikes. Paper is full of Harley's for sale 6 years old with 4,000 miles on them. Just MHO of course.
I think sometimes folks in the Northeast, DC on up, who are blessed with light rail, metros, good trains, etc get the idea that the whole country to like them. Well, it isn't. Try finding charging stations in SW Utah, or parts of Az or NM or Kansas or most of the country. My son in law told me recently that he would never live in a part of the country with good trains, light rail and good subways. I told him he just excluded 95% of the nation. But he is from Long Island and until he became an adult he thought the whole country was like Long Island. It isn't. (And that isn't all bad either.)
They already make an "Electrified trike", it's called a Hoveround..:laugh: Here's the link to them
http://www.hoveround.com/power-chair-accessories/motorized-scooters/3-wheel-power-scooters
Sorry, I had to do it....
Bubba