Motorcycles

Cake goes fully street legal with its Kalk& electric enduro bike

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The Cake Kalk& looks like a brilliant street-legal dual sport electric commuter, but shoots itself in the foot with a crazy price tag
Cake
The Kalk& is an excellent looking lightweight electric commuter at an eye-bleeding price point
Cake
Developed as an enduro machine, this thing rips
Cake
With dual sport tires, the Kalk& will be very comfortable on dirt tracks
Cake
With dual sport tires, the Kalk& will be very comfortable on dirt tracks
Cake
Lightweight construction should make it great fun to throw about
Cake
Tail scraping fun
Cake
Custom-designed Ohlins suspension is ready for abuse
Cake
Does it wheelie? Yes it wheelies
Cake
The Cake Kalk& looks like a brilliant street-legal dual sport electric commuter, but shoots itself in the foot with a crazy price tag
Cake
Don't worry, that's a fully armored kevlar suit
Cake
License plate holder
Cake
The machining on these things looks lovely
Cake
LED headlight
Cake
Dual-sport hoops
Cake
A lightweight electric commuter
Cake
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There's a neat little category opening up somewhere between e-bikes and electric motorcycles, and Cake's new Kalk& (Kalk and) is a perfect example. Weighing just 79 kg (174 lb), with a range "over 86 km" (53 mi), it'd be a super fun dual sport commuter if it wasn't for the price tag.

The minute you ride a powerful, lightweight electric bicycle like the Stealth H-52 – or heck, even just anything with a 1,000-W motor in it – you start thinking: something a bit more powerful than this, with a bit more range, would make an absolutely wild zero-emissions giggle-machine commuter if you could get it street legal, make it do highway speeds and keep it lightweight and silly.

The Cake Kalk& is such a giggle machine, and it's got all the bits and pieces necessary to make it street legal. Developed from the company's Kalk Or off-roader, it runs a 10-kW (13.4-hp) motor putting out 42 Nm (31 lb-ft) of torque – enough for a top speed "over 90 km/h (56 mph)" that won't get you honked off the freeway on a short stint. The battery offers a humble 2.6 kWh, but the range is more than enough for daily duties round town or the odd blast up a trail if you've got one close by.

Developed as an enduro machine, this thing rips
Cake

It's got programmable regen braking, multiple riding modes, 220-mm motorcycle brake discs front and rear, a mirror, LED headlight and taillights, indicators, fenders, plate holders and a set of dual-sport tires.

It's also got suspension that's been specially developed for it by Ohlins, which is probably lovely to ride on, but it contributes to the Kalk&'s biggest issue: the price of €14,000 (or US$14,000 in the USA) is just insane for what you're getting. The Zero FX, optioned up with a 7.2-kWh battery, offers four times the power and better range for $10,500, and even that's too rich for a lot of riders. China's Sur-Ron is doing a 10-kW street bike with a bigger battery for $3,000, and rumor has it the company is working on a street-legal version of its wicked Light Bee off-roader that could match or beat the Kalk& on performance for Chinese money instead of Swedish.

That's not to say the Kalk& doesn't look like a ball to ride, and a beautifully built thing, but we can't imagine it's going to sell in huge numbers at that price. Check out the Kalk& in the video below.

Source: Cake

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2 comments
Logan Delworth
They are idiots to think people will pay that kind of money! Jerks.
guzmanchinky
This is interesting, in a way better than the Zero because it is lighter...