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British-designed £90k electric motorbike comes with a helmet and jacket that digitally connects to the rider




  • The bike is aimed at rakish, trailblazing and eco-conscious millionaires and powered by an electric power cell
  • It produces 399 units of voltage - good enough for a top speed of 120mph and a range of up to 200 miles
  • More impressive is the tech: the Zenith helmet displays speed, sat-nav directions and a rear-view camera on the visor, similar to the Iron Man suit from the famous Marvel films
  • The Origin jacket vibrates to alert the rider if there are dangers around them or if they're riding too fast 

This is the new Arc Vector - a £90,000 electric bike that's been designed in the UK and been lauded as the most advanced motorcycle ever made.
Built by a team of engineers in Coventry, it has a flyweight carbon structure, performance parts lifted directly from MotoGP and uses an electric power cell that produces 399 units of voltage.
That means it can rip from stationary to 62mph in 3.1 seconds and onto a top speed of 120mph for a 'realistic range' of 200 miles.
But more impressive is that it comes with a jacket that alerts the rider to dangers around them and a helmet that projects vital information, such as their speed, revs and a rear view camera, on the visor to make you feel like Iron Man on a bike.

Nudging close to £100,000 it's not cheap, though it is said to be aimed at rakish, trailblazing and eco-conscious millionaires. 
It's the first model to be produced by Arc - a team of top engineering specialists based in the UK's high-tech automotive heartland in the midlands - who have been likened to Marvel's superhero team by the company's founder.
It has been revealed the the motorcycling world at the biggest European show of the year - Milan's EICMA event.
Likely to be the biggest talking point in the Italian fashion capital, the bike itself is a work of art.
The lightweight chassis and carbon components used for the rear and - unusual - front swing-arms mean this machine - even with a bulky electric powerplant onboard - weighs just 220kg and used exotic parts such as Ohlins suspension, Brembo brakes and BST wheels like you'd find on Valentino Rossi's MotoGP bike.
While the quote on range is 200 miles, that's for urban use. Arc says it's more like 120 miles if you're riding on the motorway - though even that is around 30 per cent more than comparable electric motorcycles already on the market.

Buyers (who can afford one) will get their own personal electric charge point installed at their desired premises. Plug the vector in and it will charge in 45 minutes - even if you use a public quick charge point in towns or at service stations.
But while the motorbike is the key component, it's the riding gear that sparks more interest. 
The Zenith helmet has been designed in collaboration with British company Hedon and has the speedo, sat-nav and ancillary graphics projected onto the rider's visor so they can keep their eyes affixed to the road.
A live rear-view camera is encased in the calfskin-trimmed helmet, giving the user the ability to see what's behind them without ever having to turn their head.

The bespoke jacket, called Origin, has Human Machine Interface (HMI) technology applied too.
It's fitted with technology that alerts the rider of potential hazards as well as providing dynamic performance-based feedback with smartphone-style vibrating notifications.
Tailored in collaboration with UK bike-protection firm Knox, the jacket can also play music as well as tell the rider how close to the limit of the motorcycle's capabilities they are based on factors such as how hard they brake or open the throttle. 
In short, you'll feel like Tony Stark riding to your next Avengers mission.


Arc's founder Mark Truman, who formerly worked for Jaguar Land Rover, said: 'We felt that there was more one could get out of motorcycling which no one was tapping into.
'This is about using technology to strip back the experience of riding a bike.
''The HUD and haptics of the helmet and jacket work in tandem with the Vector bike to remove distractions and emphasise the joy of riding.' 
Truman, 42, a purist biker and technology evangelist, has assembled an engineering dream team and put in motion an ambitious business plan.








 

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