Poging GOUD - Vrij
Revelationary Revolution
Motoring World
|September 2019
From V-twin to the sound of silence. How does the LiveWire fare?
No two ways about it. For Harley-Davidson, the most conservative motorcycle company on planet Earth with 116 years of traditional two-wheeled engineering, to beat BMW, Ducati and all four Japanese manufacturers into the mainstream electric-motorcycle marketplace, is little short of astounding. It’s the fulfilment of a far-sighted project which began back in 2010. And in 2015, Matt Levatich, Harley-Davidson's then-newly-appointed president/CEO, gave the green light to develop the LiveWire for series production, with the result that it’s now available for purchase at a US price of $29,799 + tax.
However, if compared to the rival Zero SR/F’s $20,995 + tax price tag in its most expensive guise, which also includes features absent from the Harley like a windscreen and heated grips, that’s a hefty premium to pay for that hallowed name on the ‘tank’. To power the LiveWire, Harley has employed a liquid-cooled internal permanent magnet motor dubbed the Revelation, developed in conjunction with one of Europe’s top suppliers of such motors for vehicular use. This delivers 105 bhp with a rev ceiling of 15,000 rpm, and 11.93 kgm of torque at 1 rpm. Harley claims this will propel the 249-kg bike from 0-100 kph in 3.0 secs, and 100-130 kph in 1.9 secs, with top speed limited to 185 kph.
The Revelation is energised by an air-cooled 15.5kWh lithiumion high-voltage battery pack which Harley calls the RESS, or Rechargeable Energy Storage System. This is positioned lengthways in the cast-aluminium frame, with heat sink horizontal finning that’s both visually appealing and functional, even if the only time the battery gets hot is when it’s being charged, at rest. Harley claims the LiveWire gives a range of 235 km in city use, which drops to 152 km of combined stop/go and highway use, and to 110 km at sustained 110-kph highway speeds.
Dit verhaal komt uit de September 2019-editie van Motoring World.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Motoring World
Motoring World
FUTURE PROOF
The Tata Harrier and Safari go petrol, ushering in a more refined and future-ready chapter.
5 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
2025 KTM 390 ADVENTURE
What makes a perfect shot? It's a cocktail of many elements — the right settings, correct gear, and a great environment. But more often than not, the defining factor behind a killer image is a giant pair of cojones — belonging equally to rider and photographer. Naturally, a few loose screws help, too. Thankfully, and rather coincidentally, Manaal and I align on this philosophy. How else would he willingly hoist a 21-inch wheel right up to my wide-angle lens, trusting that neither of us will cross paths catastrophically? We do have enough screws in the right places to not swap positions... Well, at least, that's what we tell ourselves.
1 min
January 2026
Motoring World
THE PERFECT 7-SEATER
The new Mahindra XEV 9S is the first of its kind – a three-row electric SUV in India
2 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
METHODICAL MADNESS
The new Streetfighter V4 S never overwhelms you. And perhaps that's exactly the problem
4 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
AND THE VICTOR IS...
The Maruti Suzuki Victoris is the Indian Car of the Year 2026
2 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
THE ULTIMATE VICTORI(E)S
By winning the Indian Car of the Year 2026 award, the Victoris has now finally got it all
2 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
FOR TURNING POINT
A turning point that makes Harley's smallest bike genuinely shine
3 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
BIG CITY, COMPACT EV
From murals to monuments, the MG Comet EV blends into Delhi's rhythm while saving you a bunch of money
3 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
DESERT GENTLEMAN
An NX that ginally feels complete and loves to escape the urban jungle
4 mins
January 2026
Motoring World
A LITTLE LESS NOISE, A LITTLE MORE SOUL
Custom builds, clever tech and a chilled-out, rider-first atmosphere were the highlights of this year's event
2 mins
January 2026
Translate
Change font size
