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ENV Motorcycle - World’s First Fuel-Cell Motorcycle
(October 2006)

Can an energy technology that's just emerging from the realm of science
fiction give new meaning to the term "crotch rocket"?
English energy tech company Intelligent Energy is looking for some quick
acceleration in the burgeoning field of fuel cell-powered vehicles with a
prototype of two-wheeled machine that it's dubbed ENV--pronounced "envy."
ENV, the company says, is the world's first purpose-built fuel-cell
motorcycle. (The name is short for "emissions neutral vehicle," as well as
being a marketing hook.)
A 1-kilowatt fuel cell generator provides power directly to the drive-train
(there are no gears), and the fuel cell is teamed with a battery pack to
provide 6 kilowatts of peak load to the motor. That's good enough, the
company says, to get the aluminum-frame bike to 50 mph on or off road, and a
full tank of hydrogen delivers up to four hours of continuous--and very
quiet--use.
The fuel cell itself, called Core, is detachable from the motorcycle and can
be used to power "anything from a motorboat to a small domestic property,"
the company says.

Consumers could get their hands on the throttle sometime next year. The
initial price is expected to be around $6,000, which a Boston Globe
automotive writer delicately says "may be overly optimistic."
The big challenge, of course, is that fuel cell technology is not yet
production-ready. It's captured the attention of people in areas from the
high-tech sector to the environmental movement, in part because of its
promise as a "clean" technology. But much work remains, and skeptics are
probably as numerous as enthusiasts.
If the bikes do come rolling off the production line, where are they most
likely to sell? They'll probably find their first buyers in nations such as
India and China, where bicycles are used more commonly as a primary mode of
transportation. In areas such as the U.S., where motorcycles are viewed more
as leisure vehicles, the weight-to-performance ratio would likely garner
greater scrutiny--and hesitation among buyers.
Reference By Jonathan Skillings news.com
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