Electric City Ventys 340 - Specifications & Review

Ventys 340

Article Complete Info

Articleid320460
CategoryScooter
MakeElectric City
ModelVentys 340
Price Euro 4290. Prices depend on country, taxes, accessories, etc.
Year2012

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeSteel
FrontbrakesSingle disc
Fronttyre130/60-13
RearbrakesSingle disc
Reartyre130/60-13

Engine & Transmission

CoolingsystemAir
EnginedetailsElectric
Power4.02 HP (2.9 kW))
Topspeed85.0 km/h (52.8 mph)

Other Specifications

ColoroptionsWhite, black
CommentsLithium battery 60V 40 Ah. 4-5 hour recharge time. 1500 discharge/recharge cycles. Range 50-70 km. Sold in France.
ElectricalDual front light
StarterElectric

Physical Measures & Capacities

Dryweight130.0 kg (286.6 pounds)
Overallheight730 mm (28.7 inches)
Powerweightratio0.0309 HP/kg

About Electric City

Country of Origin: United States
Founder: Urban mobility startup collective
Best Known For: Compact electric scooters aimed at last-mile and campus mobility

Company History

Electric City, as the name suggests, positioned itself around short, frequent trips—the last mile from transit to office, dorm to lecture hall, or apartment to errands—where a small, dependable e-scooter beats both walking and car commutes. The company targeted institutions and property managers alongside individual buyers, bundling vehicles with basic charging infrastructure, signage, and fleet dashboards that tracked usage and battery health. Technically, the scooters emphasized robustness over flash: steel subframes under plastic panels, water-resistant looms, and hub motors tuned for smooth launches rather than neck-snapping acceleration. Replaceable battery modules kept downtime low, and standardized consumables simplified service. The brand’s sales pitch resonated with universities looking to cut parking pressure and with companies exploring employee mobility perks. Historically, Electric City belongs to the wave of American micro-EV ventures that learned fast from shared-mobility booms and busts: ownership beats dockless chaos when you value care and longevity; telematics should inform maintenance, not just marketing; and chargers placed where people actually live or work are more important than fast-charge bragging rights. Even where the company changed form or name as investors and markets evolved, its practical DNA circulated widely—seen in campus RFPs demanding swappable packs, in HOA rules about indoor charging, and in maintenance playbooks that treat scooters more like appliances than toys. That, ultimately, is the quiet revolution: reliable, tame little machines that make urban life simpler.

Other Years

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