Dudes, your humble boardmate is gettin' famous over this build! All kinda articles popping up. I put a partial list
here.
Anyhoo, before it got too well known, I wanted to sneak it into a traditional bike-show and make some history. The timing was right for the Easyriders show in Anaheim. There were a couple of changes I wanted to make so it would blend better with the horde of Harleys that would surely be there. I thought I should disguise the batteries and wiring a bit better or there'd be a good chance they wouldn't let the bike in the door.
My first idea I had to change the color of the batteries was to wrap them with this aluminum-colored monoKote heat-shrink wrap I bought from a hobby-store that they use for RC model airplane skin. I thought better of it when I read that the glue melting temp was far higher than the safe temp of the Batteries. Harry76's suggestion of black paint was considered, but ultimately I found something at an art store that was both metallic looking and peel-off adhesive. So I bought a stack of copper-colored sheets of that and cut them down, and wrapped the outside cells one-by-one. Next to dress-up the wiring. I still had the braided expansion wrap variety pack from the Juicer 36 build. I went ahead and threaded the bigger red wires and BMS ribbon through that and used short sections of heat-shrink tubing to finish the ends.
Yeah. I always liked the way the contactor looks like a carb-bowl, and now the wires look like hoses. Funkin' all right! We might actually pull off the ruse long enough to get in the door. On Saturday, me and team Juicer (my buddy, Abel) arrived at the perfect time, about a half hour before setup closes. I rode Juicer partway up the ramp (because I'm lazy) and then pushed it the rest of the way so as not to arouse suspicion. When we got in line I got a little nervous. Other competitors were scrutinizing the bike but nobody said anything to us. Then I gave a lady my name and paperwork, she asked me to push the bike in front of a curtain for a photo (I gave a thumbs-up and my best yellow-toothed smile) and then we were in. Another fellah led us to my space where other bikes in the "People's Choice" competition were already set-up. He gave me an easel with our competitor number on it, but unlike everybody else's, it was absent of the details I'd provided...curious. Anyway, I figured the best thing now was to make myself scarce, until the doors opened to the public, in case they changed their minds.
Periodical recon missions told me that interest in the Juicer was high. Most folks figured out it was electric in under a minute, but only at close proximity. A few were really excited about it and let me know they would vote for it.
I stuck around to collect my trophy, but apparently it was mislabeled because they gave it to somebody else. The next day I emailed the lady in charge of the competition to find out how many votes I got. She got back to me today, saying they "don't keep that information." Well, it's probably conceited of me to assume it was a fixer, but I wonder if they'd nullify the peoples' will if I
had won. I'm sure the e-revolution is not a friendly force to them. Anyway, I'm not cryin' over it because folks are emailing me wanting to know how they can get a Juicer of their own. If the orders start coming in I think I'm gonna have to break down and buy a drill-press.