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Electric Motorcycle Conversion Motors
D&D Motor Systems is the premier electric motorcycle motor manufacturer in the U.S. for electric motorcycle conversions. Our electric motorcycle kit offers higher performance than the other electric motorcycle motor kits that are out there. Our electric motors motor have higher torque, better thermal capabilities and a competitive price. In addition, we offer a complete line of U.S. made electric motorcycle controllers to go with our electric motorcycle motors.
High Performance - Series
Regen (SEPEX) vs Series
Part Number: 170-004-0003 (Series)
Description: This Series electric motorcycle motor will work on a large range of electric motorcycles. This includes DIY electric motorcycle conversions for Motocross, standard-upright seating, sport Bike, Cruiser and many other homemade electric motorcycles. This series electric motorcycle motor makes it easy to complete your electric motorcycle conversion. With a series electric Motorcycle motor the design complexity is much less and any series electric motorcycle controller can be interchanged easily when installing your electric motorcycle kit.
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EV Car Motors Specifications
Design Parameters | |||||||
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Full Load Weight (lbs) | Voltage | Gear Ratio | Batteries/ Usable energy | Tire Size (Inches) | |||
300 | 72 | 5 | 6.5 kWh | 25 | |||
300 | 96 | 5 | 8.7 kWh | 25 | |||
500 | 72 | 5 | 6.5 kWh | 25 | |||
500 | 96 | 5 | 8.7 kWh | 25 | |||
800 | 72 | 5 | 6.5 kWh | 25 | |||
800 | 96 | 5 | 8.7 kWh | 25 |
Motor Performance and Characteristics | ||||||
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PS | HP (Peak | Continuous) | Max Efficiency | Enclosure | |||
6 | 18.9 | 7.7 | 81.7 | Ventilated | |||
6 | 25.2 | 10.3 | 81.7 | Ventilated | |||
6 | 18.9 | 7.7 | 81.7 | Ventilated | |||
6 | 25.2 | 10.3 | 81.7 | Ventilated | |||
6 | 18.9 | 7.7 | 81.7 | Ventilated | |||
6 | 25.2 | 10.3 | 81.7 | Ventilated |
Vehicle Performance | |||
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Top Speed (mph) | Contoller Amperage (Amps) | Acceleration | Range (Miles) |
48 | 500 | High | 55 |
60 | 500 | High | 70 |
48 | 500 | High | 48 |
60 | 500 | High | 65 |
48 | 500 | High | 41 |
60 | 500 | High | 54 |
Other Available Motor Options: High Performance - Series Motor Options




High Performance - SEPEX
Regen (SEPEX) vs Series
Part Number: 170-511-0003 (Regen)
Description: This Separately Excited (SEPEX) electric motorcycle motor will work on a large range of electric motorcycles. This includes DIY electric motorcycle conversions for Motocross, standard-upright seating, sport Bike, Cruiser and many other homemade electric motorcycles.
This SEPEX electric motorcycle is more complex when designing and completing your DIY electric motorcycle conversion. The main advantages are the enhanced performance, flexibility and control you get with your electric motorcycle kit conversion with Bluetooth Technology included. All electric motorcycle controllers are fully programmable.
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EV Car Motors Specifications
Design Parameters | |||||||
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Full Load Weight (lbs) | Voltage | Gear Ratio | Batteries/ Usable energy | Tire Size (Inches) | |||
300 | 48 | 5 | 4.32 kWh | 25 | |||
300 | 72 | 5 | 6.48 kWh | 25 | |||
300 | 96 | 5 | 8.64 kWh | 25 | |||
500 | 48 | 5 | 4.32 kWh | 25 | |||
500 | 72 | 5 | 6.48 kWh | 25 | |||
500 | 96 | 5 | 8.64 kWh | 25 | |||
800 | 48 | 5 | 4.32 kWh | 25 | |||
800 | 72 | 5 | 6.48 kWh | 25 | |||
800 | 96 | 5 | 8.64 kWh | 25 |
Motor Performance and Characteristics | ||||||
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PS | HP (Peak | Continuous) | Max Efficiency | Enclosure | |||
15 | 10.8 | 5.2 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 16.1 | 7.8 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 21.5 | 10.4 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 10.8 | 5.2 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 16.1 | 7.8 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 21.5 | 10.4 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 10.8 | 5.2 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 16.1 | 7.8 | 85 | Ventilated | |||
15 | 21.5 | 10.4 | 85 | Ventilated |
Vehicle Performance | |||
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Top Speed (mph) | Contoller Amperage (Amps) | Acceleration | Range (Miles) |
40 | 400 | High | 38 |
60 | 500 | High | 56 |
78 | 500 | High | 75 |
40 | 400 | High | 34 |
60 | 500 | High | 50 |
78 | 500 | High | 62 |
40 | 400 | High | 28 |
60 | 500 | High | 40 |
78 | 500 | High | 52 |
Other Available Motor Options: High Performance - SEPEX Motor Options





Need a Custom Car Motor?
Electric Motorcycles in the News
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How to Build an Electric Motorcycle By: Stryker at Instructables.com |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
Step 1I only work 3 miles from home but with gas prices getting out of control, I thought it would be great to have an electric motorcycle. I've always wanted an electric motorcycle and decided that doing an electric motorcycle conversion with an electric motorcycle motor would be a good EV project, keeping costs down, and be fun to ride.
Step 2Every motorbike is different but the basic components can be the same. Below is a list of the parts I used and where I got them, but you will have to do some research to figure out what fits your bike and requirements. Check out the electric motorcycle photos at the bottom to see what I bought and the EVAlbum for other electric motorcycle conversions.
After reading other electric motorcycle conversion specs (and knowing that I wanted to go faster than a moped), I chose a 72V electric motorcycle motor(D&D Motorsystems carries many options), because it's weight and dimensions where good for my frame.
Step 3Start the electric motorcycle conversion by removing all of those nasty internal combustion engine parts. Remove the gas tank and using your grinder or other cutting tool to cut out the bottom. This makes room for extra batteries or components. (Make sure all gas is out before cutting) Reference your owners manual often during any electric motorcycle conversions so that you don't cut any necessary wires, and try to sell some of the parts to help pay for this electric motorcycle conversion project.
Step 4Wiring. This depends on the electric motorcycle components you buy. See the manufacturers wiring diagrams.
Step 5Double check all of your connections and tighten every bolt. |
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2012 Brutus Electric Motorcycle Promises To Be Green, Mean By: Nikki Gordon-Bloomfield |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
Think about the names given to electric cars and electric motorcycles on the market today. Most, if not all, are a play on the concept of all-electric, zero tailpipe emissions travel. So when we heard about a team of engineers in Henderson, Nevada who were developing a new electric motorcycle called Brutus 2, we had to investigate. Retro Styled, Classic Charm Squint at the all-electric Brutus 2 and you’d be forgiven for thinking it was a classic Harley Davidson bobber or perhaps an Orange County Chopper. (build electric motorcycle) Either that, or a working prop from a film set in a post-appocolyptic future, Mel Gibson optional. Designed from the ground up to be the living embodiment of a sports cruiser, Brutus 2 is the first electric motorcycle we’ve seen that caters directly to fans of classic American motorcycles. Brutus 2 is also the first real stealth electric motorcycle motor we’ve seen. Unless you look at it closely, it doesn't immediately appear electric. In fact, park it up beside similar gas motorcycles, and we think you’d have a tough time telling it apart from the rest. It Isn’t Just Tough By Name But as many classic motorcycle fans will tell you, good looks and a tough name will only get a motorcycle so far. In order to be considered a real motorcycle, it has to perform like one. That’s no problem for Brutus 2, claims Chris Bell, the original designer and owner of Brutus Electric Motorcycles. Although it hasn’t had any official range, orperformance tests, Bell claims the 535-pound motorcycle can spring from 0-60 mph in around 4.7 seconds, reach a top speed of over 100 mph, and travel over 100 miles per charge. These impressive performance figures are apparently down to a five-speed clutchless transmission, a powerful D&D Motor Systems DC motor, and a liquid-cooled Zilla controller more commonly found in electric drag race cars like BlackCurrent III There aren’t any details published on battery pack capacity, although Bell claims Brutus 2 should recharge its 144-volt lithium-ion battery pack in 3 hours from an available 110-volt wall outlet. Using some basic math, we think that translates to a battery capacity of between 4 and 5 kilowatt-hours. (build electric motorcycle) Forbidden Fruit? Here’s the catch: while Brutus 2 is certainly an real electric motorcycle motor built for real motorcyclists, it hasn’t entered production yet. According to Bell, that should happen some time this year, provided current deals being discussed with various parts and manufacturing companies are signed. But right now, the all-electric beast is nothing more than an impressive prototype motorcycle awaiting production. And that’s a real shame, because we think this is exactly the kind of electric motorcycle that needs to be built in order to help convince mainstream motorcyclists that electric powered motorcycles can be mean and green at the same time. (build electric motorcycle) MSD |
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E-motorcycle offers hot ride, keeps the cool By: Angeli Duffin |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
Making the case for an electric car - higher up-front costs, but then much less expensive and environmentally damaging to operate - to someone switching from a gasoline-powered car is pretty straightforward. But convincing someone to trade in their Harley for an electric motorcycle? That could be more challenging. There has to be an element of cool. And speed. Which is what two Purdue University students and AllCell Technologies set out to produce – and appear to have delivered, with an electric motorcycle that packs 72 kilowatts of power and, according to early tests, can hit 120 mph and cover 120 miles on a charge, according to AllCell. The company said the trick to creating this high-performance bike was in the 10.6 kilowatt-hour lithium battery that uses AllCell’s thermal management material. The phase change material graphite composite (PCM-graphite) controls the impact if one cell has an internal short circuit, and the PCM material absorbs and distributes heat away from the battery, protecting the cells and maximizing battery life. While some motorcyclists might enjoy being daredevils, with this motorcycle riders can let ‘er rip and concentrate on driving without worrying about unnecessary things like an overheating battery. Apart from the battery, electric vehicle experts Tesla Motors and Delphi Corporation also provided support for the project, AllCell said. This team is not alone in the quest for the superior electric motorcycle motor. There seems to be quite a trend in motorcycle conversion to electric in garages, notably from a fellow Purdue student who we reported used solar power to power his, yes that’s right, Solar Cycle. However, for those of us who aren’t that confident in our mechanical skills, there are a growing number of companies producing electric motorcycles with both coolness (largely because of their green-factor) and impressive power and speed. (electric motorcycle conversion) |
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Will Electric Motorcycles Catch On Faster Than Electric Cars? By: By Jonathan Welsh |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
The International Motorcycle Show starts in New York today, so the Jacob Javits Center will be awash in chrome-crusted cruisers weighing more than 600 pounds and packing car-size engines, and screaming superbikes with enough horsepower to fly a four-passenger airplane. But some of the most intriguing machines at the show are small, light and nearly silent. Electric motorcycles powered by lithium batteries are beginning to look like contenders in a bike market that is increasingly concerned about fuel efficiency, emissions and noise. Electrics may attract customers who like the idea of two-wheel transport but are put off by the mechanical complexity of traditional motorcycles and the perceived difficulty in riding them. They may also have particular appeal to urban riders and commuters who can operate more easily within the bikes’ limited range. I test-rode an electric sport motorcycle called the Zero S this and week and was surprised by how appealing it is even for someone who loves the chugging rhythm of a Ducati twin or the wail of an old Honda V4. The quiet whir of the electric motor and its impressive off-the-line acceleration made the Zero ideal for city riding, where hearing nearby traffic can be as important as seeing it. While the motor puts out about 28 horsepower, it feels like much more, especially when accelerating from a standstill. I was able to leave menacing taxis far behind and the bike’s weight of less than 300 pounds gave it a light, athletic feel that made getting through midtown New York’s congestion enjoyable. The Zero S has evolved since 2009, when I rode an early version. The new bike is faster, smoother and better-looking than its predecessor and has a tighter, well-finished feel. It’s ready for prime time. As with electric cars, though, high prices could keep some customers away. The S and its on-road-off-road stable mate the DS start at $11,495. The higher-capacity battery that boosts range to 114 miles from about 76 miles with the standard battery also increases the price to $13,995. That amount would buy a Honda CBR1000RR, which is close to being a street-legal racing bike. Of course riders interested in electric motorcycles are not cross-shopping superbikes. But the Zero’s price premium could hurt sales. Still, the simple joy of riding the Zero could be as big a selling point as its potential fuel savings. In many ways its design and the way it rides are throwbacks to the minimalism and excitement of earlier motorcycles that drew so many people into riding decades ago. While I tell people that my next new car will probably be electric, a battery-powered motorcycle, in some ways, would be a better fit. |
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A new day.. a new bike. Electric Motorsports of California By: azhar |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
Oakland California USA, Electric Motorsport Inc. has unveiled its two entries for the June/12th Isle of Man TTXGP. In the open class is a modified production electric motorcycle called the GPR-S. The Electric Motorsport GPR-S were the first Production Electricmotorcycles capable of attaining legal freeway speeds in the USA. In the Pro Class, the entry is the Electric Motorsport R144. This conversion is based on an R1 race chassis. This motorcycle utilizes a high performance electric motor designed and manufactured by D&D Motor Systems, Inc. Electric Motorsport is a technology company that specializes in Light Electric Vehicles and electric propulsion systems. Electric Motorsport is proud to say they have supplied electric drive systems and components to many of the TTXGP teams that will be competing. Why does Electric Motorsport supply its competitors with hi-performance electric drive components? Electric motorsport Founder and CEO Todd Kollin says "its mainly to promote the technology and to have some one to race with, and besides we are in the parts business. Racing is just the fun part and its not much fun without competition." Electric Motorsport Inc has always placed an emphasis on the Electric motorcycle as away of using renewable energy such as solar, wind, hydroelectric, and geothermal to propel ourselves from one location to the next. The company has sold 1000's of electric motorcycle conversion kits. Electric Motorsport even sells books on how to convert your old gas motorcycle to electric. These conversions are great if you have a old bike that does not run so well or has a blown engine. An electric conversion can bring the thing back to life but without having to deal with oil, gas, noise, fumes, warm ups,tune ups, gear boxes, clutches. |
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Honda Promises An Electric Motorcycle By 2010 By: Tony Borroz |
Filed Under: Electric Motorcycles - | ||
So Honda is getting into the electric motorcycle biz huh? Well, now we know what they plan to do with all the engineering talent suddenly available from their now defunct F1 & AMA efforts. Motorcycle News (via our friends at AutoBlogGreen) says Honda is serious about building a workable Ebike and selling it to the likes of you and me by 2010. Sure, that sounds plausible. Honda has the engineering grunt and it pretty much has the whole motorcycle thing down, so it seems like a lead pipe cinch. But is it?
Not exactly. Honda faces the same hurdles everyone else does: range and recharge times. I spent some time with an outfit made electric scooters and motorcycles. It was a real geeky operation making scooters and souped-up jobs custom-built to customers' needs, desires and checkbooks. Once or twice a year someone with sacks of money would come in and say something along the lines of "Take my GSX-R and make it electric." We would, but we'd invariably face the same challenges everyone else building EVs faces: range and recharge times. Yeah, we could build an electric GSX-R that would out haul Valentino Rossi - for about seven to 10 miles. Then you'd stop. And then you'd have to plug it in for six or eight or 10 hours. The bike was cool, but not very practical. You couldn't take the thing up some canyon road on your way out of town to Palm Springs for a three day weekend. These will be the same limitations that Honda will face, but in a couple of not so noticeable ways, electric motorcycles play to Honda's strengths. For one, bikes are easy. They're small, light and easy to work on. You can fab up and try things on two or three test mules in an afternoon, and that's an order of magnitude or so harder with cars. For another, Honda is a bike company. Yeah, I know, tell that to Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost and Ron Dennis, but it started out primarily as a bike company (OK, go back far enough and it started out as a piston ring company, but still...) then morphed into a car company. What Honda learns from making an Ebike over the next two years can, hopefully, migrate to cars. Honda confirms working with bikes is favorable on a number of levels. "History shows that motorcycles remain strong in a difficult market environment and have always supported Honda in difficult times," says CEO Takeo Fukui. "People showed renewed interest in the value of motorcycles which consume less fuel for commuting purposes as well as for their easy-to-own/easy-to-use efficiency." Good point, Takeo. That's another thing bikes got going for them: They're cheap. Pound for pound and dollar for dollar motorcycles are the best bet for enthusiast fun. Not for me, of course, because I am comically and frighteningly uncoordinated and that's never a good thing on a motorcycle. But you get my point. Think of what Honda is doing as a real world proof of concept scheme. Make an electric motorcycle. Make it work. Make it work better. Then import the technology into a car. Repeat the process. What could go wrong? Photo: Honda. |
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