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Cycle World Gives Shorai Batteries a Thumbs-Up

CW Evaluation: Shorai Lithium Iron eXtreme-Rate LFX Battery




After two years, it’s still everything it’s cranked up to be.




Here is the latest long-term test done by Cycle World, reprinted with permission.  The review speaks for itself.

 

March 30, 2012 By 

 

Pity Burns’s poor old R1, abandoned for weeks on end to sit home while shiny new testbikes get ridden instead. Well, if it sits home, it’s not so bad, because then it gets plugged into the trusty battery charger. But if it gets left where there is no charger, sometimes the old girl just doesn’t want to crank over.

Other companies offer Lithium-Iron-based batteries, but Shorai says they’re all made up of cylindrical cells originally produced for power-tool applications and, as such, are inferior to Shorai’s “Prismatic LFX.” Shorai makes rectangular cells, however, designed and produced in its own factory to fit in batteries sized specifically for motorcycles. And since power-tool cells weren’t intended for the high current discharges in starter systems, they’ll wear out more quickly, claims Shorai.


Procrastination is a good thing when “battery testing.” The Shorai, delivered with a 90-percent charge, sat on Burns’s desk for a month before being transported for transplant. Sure enough, the R1’s neglected lead-acid battery could crank the engine just fast enough not to start it before giving up the ghost. Yanked from its resting place and placed upon the postage scale, the old battery weighed in at 7.8 pounds, while the new Shorai is just 1.85 lb.! Not only does it weigh 6 pounds less, the Shorai also is smaller, and its box includes an assortment of adhesive-backed foam rectangles to make it a snug fit in any battery box. Shorai even provided two sets of nuts and bolts, for people prone to dropping things. We only needed three.


Once ensconced and hooked up, the new battery spun the R1 starter like it’s never been spun before and fired up the engine immediately (in spite of yet another clogged pilot jet from modern gas and failure to Sta-Bilize). Two weeks of sitting later, same story.


Shorai says hooking up a battery tender is unnecessary but won’t hurt anything, provided the charger does not have an automatic desulfation mode (the popular Deltran “Battery Tender” does not). Another six weeks of sitting later (with Sta-Bil in the tank), same excellent cranking power. Now, after about a year-and-a-half of use and no time on the charger, the Shorai can be depended on to fire the beast after months of neglect. Chilly SoCal mornings with temps in the 30s slow its cranking not a bit; neither does throwing the battery in the freezer overnight.


Now for the downside: The LFX for a 2000 R1 sells for $159.95, just about twice what you’d pay for a normal battery. But Shorai claims that under normal conditions, an LFX battery should last 5 to 6 years. Mark it on your calendar. We only hope we’re still around to let you know how that claim works out.

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Details:

Ups

  • Instant 6-lb. weight loss for our R1
  • No lead, no acid: OK for kids to lick

Downs

  • Twice the price of a regular battery
  • There are no more downsides



Thanks to Mr. John Burns for the great review.
Original article: Cycle World

About Shorai:

Shorai Inc., located in Sunnyvale, CA, is a distributor of lithium iron based motorcycle batteries. The company was founded in 2010 by technology executive, David J. Radford, and corporate marketing and distribution executive, Kevin Riley. Further information regarding the company can be found at www.shoraipower.com