Hi Rolf,
You're certainly not alone in wanting more range and charging speed. I think charging speed is the larger problem of the two.
Imagine for a moment that you could give the bike a 100% charge in 10 minutes at common outlets.
In this case the range would be almost a non-issue. Especially at lower speeds, the Brammo and the Zero bikes have roughly as much as some smaller-tank gas bikes, and the larger battery
Brutus V9 (280 miles city / 210 miles highway) has more single-tank range than most gas bikes on the market.
The 2013-2014 Empulse 3 kW charger is a good first step towards faster charging; it improves long-distance touring from virtually impossible (Zero / Enertia) to merely very difficult - see Shinysideup's
well-documented 1000 mile trip on the Empulse. Brammo could add a second Powercharger 3000 to the bike, giving it a 6 kW charge rate and allowing it to charge from 20% to 80% in 1 hour - roughly 50 miles of mixed riding in an hour of charging. This is still not "great" but it would allow an adventurous rider to complete a 200 or 300 mile trip in a single day. Still nowhere near the convenience of liquid fueling, and the 32 amp limitation on most public J1772 EVSE makes a further doubling less useful.
For faster charging we need both a well-distributed, single-standard DC charging network and batteries that can accept high charge rates. The
Mission R is a preview of the latter; 110 miles of mixed range riding can be charged in 30 minutes, approximately 8x the rate of the current Empulse. Further, it should be possible to double this effective charge rate as future batteries accept power more quickly. This turns charge time into a non-issue for pleasure riding, and makes touring 500 to 600 miles in a day possible.
I don't think we will see this in 2015 from Brammo. Probably closer to 2017, along with the Empulse RS.