Components , a range of electric bike components were available, including electric motors by Acron, 300 watt power conversion adaptors by Panasonic Industries and with Electragil Software, bike lights by Phillips, and several designs batteries by HighTech Energy, plus
human interfaces by Marquardt. A specific inverter was available from Kaco for
islanding. Electragil, a Swiss company located close to
Winterthur, markets an integrated E-Bike component system. Pironex, a German company located at the baltic sea, provides a large scale of EnergyBus products like intelligent charger, battery-adaptors and input/output-devices. Mobipus, a Taiwan company, located at New Taipei City, provides complete line of PMSM motor controller (from 48v to 300v) for electric motorcycle and scooter and battery management system. EnergyBus component developers can make use of a set of prepackaged software libraries and a framework of development tools.
Electric bicycles By 2012 the first electric bicycle based on EnergyBus, was introduced by TourDeSuisse (TDS) in Switzerland. This bicycle, call The Impulse was built on the Electragil system. The G1 is a E-Bike for heavy goods transport introduced in 2012. The Copenhagen Wheel, an integrated motor, sensor and battery for bike assistance, is equipped with an EnergyBus connector.
Public infrastructure Public charge stations for
pedelecs have been deployed in the
Tegernsee region.
Island power systems In
stand-alone power system systems operating in "island" mode without a connection to an electrical grid, EnergyBus can be used to interconnect small electrical devices. Examples are repeater stations in mobile communication networks, measurement stations, off-grid housing, village-sized direct current grids, and off-grid water pumping stations. The
Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems was using EnergyBus in electrical island systems in Egypt with
photovoltaic panels and batteries, including the Kaco converters. ==History==