Getting a motorcycle license just got a little easier – and more electrifying. In a move that could help usher more riders into the electric future, new riders now have a chance to learn on LiveWire electric motorcycles as part of a licensing course.
It’s all starting at Bartels’ Harley-Davidson Riding Academy in Marina del Rey, where new riders preparing for the Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) riding course can now opt for a LiveWire electric motorcycle instead of the standard internal combustion engine (ICE) motorcycle learner bikes.
The Riding Academy is now integrating the LiveWire S2 Mulholland and the S2 Alpinista into its official training fleet for its MSF-based rider course, making it one of the first in the country to use electric motorcycles for license training. Aspiring motorcyclists can now learn to ride on a smooth, quiet, clutch-free electric machine instead of the gasoline-powered bikes typically used in beginner courses.
Without the need to learn and master concepts such as clutch friction zones and shifting, riders can dedicate more focus to the riding principles that form the foundation of safe motorcycling.
Advertisement – scroll for more content
New riders learn those skills associated with safe motorcycle riding alongside instructors certified by the California Motorcyclist Safety Program (CMSP) and the Harley-Davidson Riding Academy. Graduates of the course earn their DL389 and Riding Academy Certificate of Completion. That leaves riders just one written exam passing score away from receiving their motorcycle endorsement.
Greg Andrews is the Riding Academy Site Manager at Bartels’ Harley-Davidson, and he explained that adding the LiveWire electric motorcycle into the rider course fundamentally shifted how students were able to learn.
“What the LiveWire does, as a basic trainer, is to allow the student to focus strictly on core riding skills,” said Andrews. He added that the XG500 and RA350 ICE motorcycles normally used in the course are good bikes in their own right, but they aren’t ideal for training new riders on important handling skills because of the added distraction in having to first learn and become proficient in operating a clutch and shifting while mastering throttle control.
“Students who have no idea of the science of leaning, corner traction percentages, gained and lost to lean angle, etc., are distracted by the ICE powertrain, versus the LiveWire students, whose sole focus is riding essentials,” said Andrews. “As a pilot, my father had me learn initially in gliders. There I learned pitch, roll, and yaw, coordinated turning, etc., and all the things necessary to fly larger aircraft. I’ve flown 60 different aircraft since. The LiveWire is essentially the glider.”
Members from Alpinestars’ graphics team were among the first to participate in the inaugural electric option for the rider training course.
“The repetition of stop-and-go made me appreciate eliminating clutch and shifting. It was also much easier to navigate tight turns and cone swerving,” said course graduate Tyler Emond, who completed the rider training on a LiveWire S2 electric motorcycle. “I think from a beginner standpoint, electric is 100% the way to start out.”
It was a sentiment shared by many, even those who already had experience with manual transmission vehicles. “I already know the basics of shifting because I’ve ridden dirt bikes and I drive a manual transmission car,” said fellow course graduate Dillon Kinkead. “And I think that being able to work on operating a motorcycle without having to focus on shifting is a benefit because I was able to concentrate on accelerating, braking, and turning.”
Bartels’ Harley-Davidson Rider Academy is now taking enrollment for more classes featuring the LiveWire S2 learner bikes, and interested riders can sign up online. LiveWire plans to expand electric rider training across the country, making riding more accessible and less intimidating for new generations.
Electrek’s Take
I have been calling for this for years and I’m super excited to finally see it become a possibility.
To be honest, I often saw it merely as cutting out an unnecessary step of learning something that would likely never be used (i.e., shifting gears on a motorcycle). Electric learner bikes didn’t used to be an issue because most electric motorcycle riders were converts from ICE bikes, having made the switch after seeing the light. But with more people than ever getting into electric motorcycles without ever having ridden a gasoline-powered motorcycle, it made sense to me that learning to work a clutch on a gas bike was wasted effort in such a case.
But I never really thought about how much more quickly it would allow someone to actually leapfrog the skills-based learning. And that makes perfect sense. Why spend several hours crawling across a parking lot while discussing the “friction zone” when you could already be learning about countersteering, lean angles, and evasive maneuvers?
And if I can speak from personal experience for a moment, this hits home for me as someone who actually went through a Harley-Davidson Rider Academy course to get my motorcycle license. In fact, I’ve gone through licensing courses in two countries, once on a Harley-Davidson Street 500 and once on a Kawasaki Ninja 400. I drove a 40-year-old manual transmission car every day in high school, and so learning to shift on a motorcycle came quickly, but few people come from that background anymore. I saw plenty of people struggle to learn to shift when they should have been learning to ride. And since plenty of folks like me see themselves in an electric motorcycle future, that extra time and frustration spent learning muscle memory only relevant to a gasoline-powered bike is wasted.
For those that do plan to go back to ICE, I can definitely see the value here too. You master the riding skills first, then you can spend all the time you need to learn to shift smoothly. But trying to learn to ride when you only learned how to get into first gear an hour ago is a recipe for frustration.
So, short story short, I’m all about this. With a whole generation of young riders now getting into motorcycles thanks to years of riding electric bikes, I imagine there will be many more takers for these types of all-electric training programs in the coming years.
FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links.More.