Do you want to go a long way without charging and have to wait a long time once you need to charge or do you want to go a series of shorter distances with very fast charges each time you stop. Another interesting thing to wonder is if electric vehicles will ever reach ICE on that level since an ICE vehicle can do both and go very far and refuel very fast. Time will tell.
Battery-swaps can be faster than a gas fillup, at least in carefully constructed scenarios - see Tesla and the now-bankrupt Better Place. But in practice, battery swaps have huge logistics and inventory issues that really keep them isolated to very niche applications, like endurance racing and along certain very heavily-traveled corridors.
In commuter applications, electric can offer more real-world range than gas. See
my experience - tl;dr is that while electric fills up to 100% overnight, gas can start the day at 50% to 25% forcing a re-fill at a time that may not be opportune. However, if you DO have to do an unexpected fill-up midday, electric probably will take too long.
And it won't be too long before electric bikes offer more range than most gas bikes, full stop.
In 2011 you could buy a 4 kWh Zero that offered 30 miles of mixed range @ $10k
In 2012 you could buy a 7.9 kWh Zero that offered 63 miles of mixed range @ $14k
In 2013 you could buy a 10 kWh Zero that offered 93 miles of mixed range @ $16k
In 2014 you can buy a 12.5 kWh Zero that offers 116 miles of mixed range @ $17.5k
Brutus V9 33.7 kWh claims 280 miles of range in the city, 210 on the highway.
http://brutusmotorcycle.com/brutusV9.htmlThis compares pretty favorably to "long-range" gas bikes, like BMW 1200 RT @ 41 mpg, 6.6 gal tank = 275 miles of range.
Charging of course will take significant time. But let's use the Brutus V9 as an example.
Suppose the Brutus can get a 70% charge in 30 minutes from 50 kW CHAdeMO or J1772 DC (charge from 10% to 80%). That's 150 miles, or about 2 hours of riding in 30 minutes (20% of round trip time charging) .. and very close to what the Tesla Model S can charge at with 120 kW supercharger.
And if you can "cheat" and charge on both sides - for example, an overnight stay - then charge times are even less penalizing.
150 mile trip: ~2.5 hours riding, no charge required (0% trip time spent charging)
200 mile trip: ~3.5 hours riding, 0.25-0.5 hours charging (7-13% of trip time, 1 stop)
300 mile trip: ~5 hours of riding, 0.5-0.75 hours charging (9-13%, 1-2 stops)
400 mile trip: ~6.5 hours riding, 0.75-1.0 hours charging (10-13%, 2 stops)
500 mile trip: ~8 hours of riding, 1.0-1.25 hours charging (11-14%, 2-3 stops)
This is on the freeway, which is the "worst case" for electric motorcycles.
A 300 mile "scenic route" trip might take 6 to 8 hours to ride, and require a 30 minute charge at some point along the way (6-8%).
Charging is certainly not free from compromise - electric will probably never satisfy the iron butt riders - but it's probably good enough for the majority of riders provided charging infrastructure is sufficiently available.