Correction asked for, correction received: Terry has 27 kWh of battery capacity onboard, more than a Nissan Leaf has (IIRC, 24 kWh). In addition, he carries a couple hundred pounds' worth of chargers around so he can recharge quickly too. I can't imagine his bike weighs less than 1200 pounds or so with him on board.
The Nissan LEAF uses 3.8V 33AH cells in a
96S2P configuration, for approximately 24 kWh at nominal capacity. In practice, the LEAF delivers closer to 21 kWh because the nominal capacity rating is measured at a gentle 0.3C discharge.
Terry's bike with 9 modules uses 3.65V 20Ah cells in a 18S18P (!) configuration, for 23.7 kWh of nominal capacity. Probably slightly more real-world capacity than a LEAF; while nominal capacities as in this case can be compared with a grain of salt,
comparing nominal to maximum capacity is never right!
Thanks for that. I think I'm too used to typing kWh with a decimal point. The mass is certainly a concern, at least with current generation batteries and a custom build. A more integrated approach might bring that down a bit but not enormously.
The ZF9 monolith weighs 69.4 kg. Each ZF3 module weighs 24.5 kg; he has six modules, so at least "stock" his 23.7 kWh battery would weigh 216 kg or 476 pounds for approximately 110 Wh/kg. Summing the volume of all modules, less all the connective hardware etc, works out to 131L or ~181 Wh/L.
The ZF12.5 monolith is rated at 11.0 kWh nominal capacity. I assume it is very similar in weight and volume to the 2013-2014 monolith, which weighs 77 kg for 143 Wh/kg and 266 Wh/L.
Assuming a scaled up monolith would have similar density, a 23.7 kWh monolith based on the 2015 27Ah cells would weigh
50 kg / 110 pounds less and occupy
less than 2/3 of the volume of the 2012 frankenpack.
The 4 brick monolith is 378 x 252 x 430.5 mm (L x W x H). The main body of the "brick" is approximately 200 x 248 x 188 mm.
An 8 brick 22 kWh monolith could be laid out as a 2x2x2 configuration of bricks. The main body of the monolith would be approximately 400 x 376 x 500 mm ( L x W x H). The length and height would increase slightly (2 to 7 cm); the width would increase by 12 cm or 5", which might be uncomfortable to straddle. But it certainly would be smaller and lighter than Terry's bike, probably less than 600 pounds with slightly less capacity. Add streamlining and a high density charging solution and total weight would still be less than 700 pounds I think.