GreenTrans EM25 Shine - Specifications & Review

EM25 Shine

Article Complete Info

Articleid102098
CategoryScooter
MakeGreenTrans
ModelEM25 Shine
Year2020

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeSteel tube
FrontbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
FrontsuspensionDual Hydraulic Shock Absorber
Fronttyre90/90-10
RearbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
RearsuspensionSingle Hydraulic Shock Absorber
Reartyre100/80-10

Engine & Transmission

EmissiondetailsNo direct emissions
EnginedetailsElectric
EnginetypeDC Brushless Side Motor
Gearbox1-speed
Power2.68 HP (2.0 kW))
Topspeed50.0 km/h (31.1 mph)
TransmissiontypefinaldriveBelt

Other Specifications

ColoroptionsOrange, grey, white, blue
CommentsRange 60 km. Recharging time: 5-6 hours. Made in Taiwan.
InstrumentsDashboard TFT
StarterElectric

Physical Measures & Capacities

Dryweight40.0 kg (88.2 pounds)
Overallheight1,015 mm (40.0 inches)
Overalllength1,560 mm (61.4 inches)
Overallwidth655 mm (25.8 inches)
Powerweightratio0.0670 HP/kg

About GreenTrans

Country of Origin: Taiwan
Founder: Taiwanese e-mobility engineering group (public leadership varies by period)
Best Known For: Early-generation electric scooters for dense Asian cities

Company History

GreenTrans emerged during Taiwan’s first serious push toward electric two-wheelers, focusing on practical city scooters designed to replace 50–125 cc petrol models. The goal wasn’t headline speed; it was livability—hub motors that shrug off rain, battery packs sized for daily commutes, and charging that works from household sockets. As incentives and municipal pilot programs appeared, GreenTrans supplied fleets for campuses and light-duty delivery, iterating quickly on waterproofing, connectors, and BMS accuracy after real-world feedback. While later entrants popularized battery swapping and app ecosystems, GreenTrans helped prove the base case: if an e-scooter starts every morning, reports range honestly, and is cheap to run, riders will adopt it. The company’s manufacturing partners in Taiwan’s mature supplier network improved consistency in plastics and looms, raising reliability over early prototypes. Historically, GreenTrans represents the groundwork phase of electrification—smaller brands taking risks before infrastructure and consumer habits caught up. Their scooters trained dealers on EV service, taught riders about charging discipline, and nudged regulators toward clearer homologation rules. Even where the badge is less visible today, the discipline of modular design and apartment-friendly charging that GreenTrans normalized still underpins Taiwan’s thriving e-scooter culture.

Other Years

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