It is. I believe the lower photo is from last year, when he had the shorter tail mounted.
Here's the
latest update from facebook.
Been working on the bike for the last 2 months, and it's almost complete. I have more battery capacity than a Nissan Leaf now.
Met my friend Elsa from France who rides an R6. We went for a fast ride up hwy 9 and Skyline to get here.
My first bar just went away, so I'm about 9% down or 91% charged. I could do this ride 9 more times. Perhaps overkill at this point, as there aren't enough hours in the day to do that.
Here's the last update from Craig on modifications they are making to the bike:
http://www.craigvetter.com/pages/2014-streamliners/2014-Terry's-streamlined-tail-pt-2-p74-.htmlHe's got about 20 kW of AC charging power up front in the nose, and Craig's blog shows where he mounts the two auxillary packs for a total of 13.1 kWh nominal (ZF-15). The blog mentions that he can mount one more auxillary pack for a total of 15.8 kWh nominal (ZF-18); I guess from his facebook post above (LEAF = around 20-21 kWh available energy) that he is now running two additional packs beyond that, for a total of 8 modules (3 stock, 5 additional).
ZF-24 = 21.0 kWh nominal (65.7V nominal 320 Ah!)
Crazy. He should have about 200 miles of highway range with that configuration and can charge in about an hour with 3 J1772 plugs. Very similar in range and charging capabilities to a Model S 85 kWh, except that he's using 21 kW AC instead of 135 kW DC.
I hope he has reinforced the bike some based upon previous failures. The 5 additional modules will weigh about 250 pounds, the 9 chargers weigh around 200 pounds. Bike curb weight is probably sitting around 900 pounds, as a guess.