Archive for May, 2010

Ride To Work Day, June 21st – Commuting in Buck’s County

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Ride to Work Day is June 21st, 2010. The details for the day can be found here.

Why do we need a Ride to Work Day? Marketing Ace, Jill Kahlenberg (Marketing Management Solutions) sent me this fascinating factoid from City-Data.com for Bucks County that shows us maybe not as many people ride as we thought.
City-Data.Com Data for Bucks County, PA

Drove a car alone: 251,994 (83%)
Carpooled: 25,277 (8%)
Bus or trolley bus: 1,056 (0%)
Streetcar or trolley car: 42 (0%)
Subway or elevated: 442 (0%)
Railroad: 6,806 (2%)
Ferryboat: 19 (0%)
Taxi: 120 (0%)
Motorcycle: 204 (0%)
Bicycle: 553 (0%)
Walked: 5,079 (2%)
Other means: 1,202 (0%)
Worked at home: 10,792 (4%) (City-Data.com)

So, motorcycles beat out the Taxi, the Streetcar and we crushed the Ferryboat as ways to get to work. But there is nothing but a growth opportunity for bikes when compared to other modes of transportation in Bucks County.

All kidding aside, getting folks from here to there, quickly, efficiently and with a smile is what we believe we do. Everyday I leave Doylestown and drive to Sellersville. Almost everyday, traffic coming down Rt 313 is stop and go. Sometimes the stop and go traffic begins before Dublin. SEVEN miles of traffic! Almost *all* the vehicles have one person in them.

Many of them are not smiling.

Rt 313 Traffic

Contrast that with this video from Taipei, Taiwan.

It might help if I explain how I look at this video. I don’t see a comparison of cultures, countries, money or politics.

I see how many people make it through a green light versus how many get through the average traffic light here. I think it’s stunning.

The winning hand for a “I want to move folks from here to there” scenario is traffic density. You can just put more scooters and motorcycles in a given space. Every scooter beyond a 50cc will accelerate and keep up with most all other vehicles in an urban setting.

We can just fit more people in the same space with bikes. We proved that a long time ago here. Nine bikes and scooters fit in the same space the MPG Motors F-150.

F-150 and Bikes

The future modes of personal transportation in SE Pennsylvania will include more scooters and motorcycles. More people will live in this area over time and funding for new roads will probably not keep pace.

With our bikes, we will be able to do more with the same roads.

You, and apparently pretty much you alone for now, are leading the way! Mark your calendar, reach out to your elected officials and get out and ride to work on June 21st.

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No Joke – A Yamaha T-Max With Laughing Gas

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Mike McLaughlin, his wife and a friend stopped by recently. Friend was riding a Honda CBR 600, Mike and his wife were riding scooters. Now, scooters and sport bikes riding together can and has been done but it’s not something I often see when riders come to visit.

It made much more sense after I spent some time looking over Mike and his wife’s scooters. Mike’s wife rides a Suzuki Burgman 400. Her Burgman has a Leo Vince custom exhaust and also had a big electronic air-fuel ratio gauge near eye-level. We don’t usually see that either! An air-fuel ratio meter??

Mike then showed me his ride, a Yamaha T-Max. The T-Max is relatively new to the US market and “blurs the boundaries between scooters and motorcycles”. In my words, it’s a performance scooter. The stock T-Max starts out with a 500cc twin-cylinder motor. That is almost twice as big as our biggest scooter motor. Our scooters offer a lot of the rest of the T-Max technology, dual front disc brakes, rear disc brakes, four valves per cylinder. We have scooters that can run over 80 mph. Mike’s scooter goes … faster.
TMax
Mike started with the T-Max and then he got to work touching it up.

To the stock T-Max, Mike added a Yoshomira R-77 full carbon fiber exhaust system, a J.Costa racing variator (high-performance transmission) and a BMC high flow air filter.
TMax Yosh
So far so good. The Genuine Stage II Kit we talked about last month (John and Tara’s “One Bad Buddy”) had most all of that.

Then Mike added a Dyno Tune Nitrous Oxide System (NOS) with a 25 shot bottle. Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) was used in World War II to increase the power of the fighter and reconnaissance aircraft – often at high altitude where the air is thinner. You can read what Wiki says about NOS here. Or, you can go watch the Fast and the Furious movie with Vin Diesel. In the F&F movie, they yell “NOS” about every five minutes – it’s a big part of the movie. But adding the NOS system is only half the story if you don’t want the engine to grenade…
TMax NOS
Finally, Mike added what I feel is the most critical upgrade – a Two Brothers Juice Box fuel injection controller. All that Nitrous Oxide adds oxygen to the motor and you must add additional fuel if you want the motor to survive. The Juice Box does that for Mike.

Mike did a really professional job. It all looks factory which is often the true test of a modification suite. He knew the technology and did his research and the end result is just what he wanted.

Mike was kind enough to let me ride his ‘Max. I didn’t use the NOS but even without the bottle, it’s the fastest scooter I’ve ever ridden.

Thanks for the ride, Mike! Nice Job!

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