Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

Vintage Electric readies the Roadster Speed Merchant, a souped-up ebike

Add as a preferred source on Google

Vintage Electric introduced the latest in its line of retro-styled premium performance ebikes for fall 2019. The Vintage Roadster gets its styling cues from classic board track racing motorcycles and its power from a 1,123-watt battery.

Recommended Videos

You’ll be excused if you think the Roadster looks more like a motorcycle than a bicycle. The resemblance is intentional. Vintage characterizes each of its five models with a descriptive nickname. The Rally model is known as as “Rowdy Elegance,” and the Scrambler ebike is “Adventure Amplified.” The new Roadster’s nickname is “Speed Merchant.”

All Vintage Electric models emphasize speed. Most ebikes on the market are speed-limited by their vehicle class to no more than 20 mph. The Vintage Cafe and Rally models are Class 3 ebikes with a maximum 28 mph speed with pedal assistance, but do not have a throttle-only mode. Like the Tracker and Scrambler models, the Roadster is a Class 2 ebike, which specifies both pedal assistance and throttle-only mode.

Class 2 ebikes are limited to just 20 mph, but the Vintage Tracker, Scrambler, and Roadster each have an available $149 “Race Mode” option. When the Race Mode key is inserted, the motor puts out more power and the maximum speed to 36 mph. Vintage cautions that Race Mode only should be engaged when riding on private property.

With a hydroformed aluminum frame and inverted suspension front fork with 60mm of travel, the Roadster rides on 26-inch diameter by 2.35-inch-wide Schwalbe Fat Frank tires with a layer of kevlar to resist punctures. The front wheel hub is polished black with a 2mm thru-axle and the rear hub houses the 135mm 750-watt/3000-watt direct drive. The motor puts out 750 watts in Street Mode and 3,000 watts in Race Mode.

The Roadster’s 48-volt, 234-amp-hour battery delivers 1,123-watt-hours for a rated 40-75 miles of range in street mode. Race Mode cuts the range in inverse proportion to the higher speed. The battery charges in 4.5 hours with the included standard charger. The ebike’s headlight and taillight are both 6-volt LEDs powered by the battery.

When you ride the Roadster with pedal assistance, you can select from five power levels. Lower assistance levels translate to longer battery life and therefore to travel range. You also use the bike’s thumb-throttle for power without pedaling.

You can regain a bit of battery power when you engage the rear regenerative hydraulic disc brake. The front and rear wheels both have Promax Lucid hydraulic disc brakes for firm stoppage – a necessity with an ebike that can tool along at a solid 36 mph (on private property). Photos of the bike breaching a rise with the front wheel in the air hint that the Roadster belongs to the relatively small group of wheelie-capable performance ebikes.

A dual-density perforated leather saddle matches the Roadster’s leather grips on a Choromoly rise bar. The ebike is available in one two-tone color combination: Gloss Black and Silver. The seat post and seat binder are polished alloys and the steering stem billet aluminum. The 26-inch by 50mm rims have stainless steel spokes.

The Vintage Electric Roadster lists for $6,995. Race mode, without which purchasing this bike is about style only, is a $149 option. You can also add a rear rack for $289, a rack with one pannier for $438, or a rack with two panniers for $587. A two-year warranty backs the Roadster for original purchasers only.

Board track racing was popular in the 1910s and 1920s. The round and oval tracks were made from two by fours and ranged from 0.5 to 2 miles long. The first board track, the 1.0-mile Los Angeles Motordrome, was built in 1910. Board tracks were inexpensive to construct compared to asphalt pavement, but they were not durable and often needed rebuilding within three years. Due to a combination of factors including the onset of the Great Depression, board track racing ended in the late 1920s.

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
Cambrige experts find utterly simple fix for longer lasting EV batteries. Just put some pressure on it.
Scientists found a way to make EV batteries last longer without reinventing the battery
EV Charging

EV battery breakthroughs typically involve new chemistry, exotic materials, or faster charging/higher capacity. But a new study reveals that you can skip all the fancy stuff and go with a very simple solution, Researchers from the University of Cambridge found that putting the battery under the right amount of pressure actually helps.

The study was about how physical pressure affects lithium-ion battery life, which found that keeping cells under constant pressure could double their lifespan. The work was published in Nature Energy, and the team says the improvement came without changing the active materials, electrolyte, or basic battery chemistry.

Read more
BMW reveals redesigned X5 with petrol, hybrid, EV, and hydrogen options
BMW couldn't decide on a powertrain, so it launched all of them
BMW X5

BMW has pulled the wraps off the fifth-generation X5, giving one of its best-selling luxury SUVs its biggest overhaul yet. The new model brings a fresh Neue Klasse-inspired design, a completely redesigned interior, and the broadest choice of powertrains the X5 has ever offered. Alongside petrol, diesel, and plug-in hybrid versions, BMW has introduced the first fully electric iX5, while confirming that a hydrogen-powered X5 will join the lineup at a later stage.

More powertrain choices, more technology, and a fresh design

Read more
Tesla has a battery theft problem
Even Tesla's batteries can't wait to hit the road
Tesla cars at Superchargers

Tesla is facing an unusual security problem in the US, and it is happening before many of its batteries even make it onto the road. According to an investigation by WIRED, multiple truckloads of Tesla batteries have allegedly been stolen directly from the company's Nevada Gigafactory, highlighting a growing wave of organised cargo theft targeting high-value technology shipments.

Cargo theft is becoming a serious problem for Tesla

Read more