Charging the bike with solar mid-day is always an attractive idea! It may be more difficult than you think to perform, however.
Check out these other threads with more discussion:
http://electricmotorcycleforum.com/boards/index.php?topic=2897.msg14290#msg14290http://electricmotorcycleforum.com/boards/index.php?topic=3323.0You have a few options for building the system. Will depend on how the onboard charger behaves when the input voltage and available current drop below what it expects, and whether it can accept wide-ranging DC input (see threads above).
1. Large solar array connected to the onboard charger. (Optional: connect via inverter if OBC can accept only AC, or MPPT DC/DC for better efficiency). Disadvantage is that the OBC will likely be upset if the available power drops out of the minimum it requires.
2. Small solar array connected to a battery system connected to the onboard charger. As with the above, you can use an inverter or MPPT DC/DC between. The battery system should be sized such that it can at least tolerate small interruptions in the solar power supply, in case of intermittent shading.
3. Solar system connected to a custom MPPT DC/DC converter with appropriate output to charge the bike battery. This replaces the OBC and connects directly to the battery. Advantage is that this is absolutely the most efficient way to use the solar panels. Disadvantage is that it's going to require some custom power electronics.. seems like this is a good gap to solve! Maybe someone already offers a solution for this..
4. Connect the solar system to the grid (net-metered), and simply plug the bike into the grid as needed. Giving up, yes, but this is likely to be the best use of the solar panels in general; if directly connected to the bike, the solar panels will only charge the bike during the week when the bike is plugged in; never on weekends, never while you're out riding mid day or before/after you get to work, etc.