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‘Unparalleled performance’ shown off in InMotion’s new 68 MPH electric unicycle

InMotion is known for its wide range of electric unicycles, a type of personal electric vehicle that looks foreign to many but is prized by the fiercely vocal electric unicycle market as an ultraconvenient ride. Now, InMotion is taking on some of the highest power names in the game with the launch of its newest model, the Adventure.

The Adventure is InMotion’s highest-performance electric unicycle to date.

The performance is somehow both impressive and, frankly, somewhat frightening.

The Adventure comes with an ultra-torquey motor that carries a sticker rating of 4000W but actually puts out a peak power of up to 9,000W. And while I’ve never heard of this before, the Adventure has a third rating that is somehow higher than its “peak” power rating. The “maximum power” is listed at a staggering 12,000W.

That high-power motor can spin the wheel up to 110 km/h (68 mph), though real-world speed on such high-power unicycles is often less due to inefficiencies found in, well, the real world.

InMotion says the Adventure electric unicycle can climb slopes of up to 50 degrees. Not a 50% grade, mind you. That would only be 26 degrees. InMotion is talking about fifty-honest-to-goodness-degrees (i.e., gaining more altitude than forward progress).

The company says the wheel’s “ability to continuously climb long slopes exceeds that of similar 16-inch EUCs by over 50%, making it well-prepared for various steep challenges.” Yeah, I’ll say. This sounds like the kind of wheel a Blue Angels pilot rides to work.

The unicycle comes with full suspension (is it still called “full” suspension if there’s only one wheel?), which is described as both adjustable and progressive. That progressive suspension design varies the spring rate to “ensure sufficient rebound even during intense off-road segments like jumps and steep slopes, protecting the rider’s knees.”

The Adventure includes a semi-quick release 2.4 kWh battery that can charge at up to 16A or an impressive 0-80% in one hour. The removable design seems to require a bit of work but claims to be possible in 10 minutes, which is much easier than on most electric unicycles that aren’t as user-friendly when it comes to owners performing work on them.

The 39-kilogram (86-pound) wheel has just launched and is now available for pre-order for the high-performance price of around US $3,300, depending on the local dealer.

Electrek’s Take

Top comment by scott

Liked by 6 people

Let me clarify a few things for those that are not familiar with EUCs, which seem to be both the author and the commenters below.

I've been riding eucs since they first came out, I currently ride an original Sherman, and I've traversed the country on it multiple times, I live in Korea, I probably have 10,000 miles riding eucs.

The author's comment about crashing is false, you should never crash on an EUC even while you're learning, I've taught about 10 of my co-workers had a ride and these are all guys in their 60s and none of them have ever crashed and they've all learned to ride it within about 30 minutes, now one guy did skin his knee on an unplanned dismount, but I wouldn't call it a crash it was a low-speed dismount and then he fell over.

I would really like to see the author get more involved in eucs, as he said himself the range is absolutely unparalleled in EVs, as is the portability and convenience.

It's not as hard to get that to that intuitive feeling part that he's talking about, I would say two or three sessions on the machine and you're there, and then the speed comes later.

In summary I would like to urge everyone to try eucs, forget the hype, forget the fear mongering because it's exactly that fear-mongering.

EUCs are the most intuitive transportation device on the planet and will remain so until jetpacks become readily available.

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Of all the micromobility vehicles out there, electric unicycles are the ones that I have the least experience with. But even with the limited miles I’ve ridden on them, I can absolutely see why the growing EUC community is so rabidly in favor of these small yet capable machines.

Unlike my e-scooters, e-bikes, e-skateboards, e-motorcycles, or just about anything else I commute on, an electric unicycle can hit speeds as fast as anything else yet still fit unobtrusively under a chair. You can take it anywhere, never have to worry about it getting stolen, and it’s even a weirdly fun way to get around – after you spend a few days crashing to learn how to ride one.

The InMotion Adventure is obviously much more EUC than most people would need, and I highly recommend learning to ride on something smaller and tamer in the beginning. But it’s impressive to see just how far these machines have come and that InMotion isn’t going to sit idly by while other companies run away with the high-power end of the market.

It’s not exactly clear when the InMotion Adventure will start shipping, so in the meantime, I’ll leave you with a video of me giving another wheel the ol’ college try while reviewing a significantly lower power yet still impressive electric unicycle.

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Author

Avatar for Micah Toll Micah Toll

Micah Toll is a personal electric vehicle enthusiast, battery nerd, and author of the Amazon #1 bestselling books DIY Lithium Batteries, DIY Solar Power, The Ultimate DIY Ebike Guide and The Electric Bike Manifesto.

The e-bikes that make up Micah’s current daily drivers are the $999 Lectric XP 2.0, the $1,095 Ride1Up Roadster V2, the $1,199 Rad Power Bikes RadMission, and the $3,299 Priority Current. But it’s a pretty evolving list these days.

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