The Future of Paramotors

165 lbsThrust
21 kWPower
50-80 minFlight
$0.60/hrCost

Best of both worlds

One frame. Gas or electric. Easy to swap.

SP140 V2.5 Electric

SP140 V2.5 Electric

Quiet, powerful, with zero maintenance.

  • 165 lbs thrust
  • 50–80 min flight
  • 21 kW peak
  • 1 moving part
SP140 V2.5 ICE

SP140 V2.5 ICE

  • 3+ hours in the air, or refuel on the road
  • Same SP140 frame — accepts a 16 L tank and the Atom 80 or Moster 185
  • Swap powertrains on the same frame anytime

Why Go Electric?

Electric paramotors strip away the complexity so you can focus on the fun part — flying.

Quieter Flight

~80 dB, about 10 dB quieter than gas paramotors (~90 dB). Easier on neighbors; ear protection still recommended for long flights.

Electric
80 dB
Gas
90 dB

Zero Maintenance

One moving part. No spark plugs, carburetors, or oil changes.

1part
vs
50+parts

Instant Power

No warm-up, no pull-starting. Flip a switch and fly.

0 secstartup

Zero Emissions

No exhaust, no fuel spills. Fly clean and green.

Easy Transport

Packs down in 5 minutes. No fuel mess. Half the size of gas units.

Smart Controls

Cruise control, real-time telemetry, and altimeter, backed by published designs and code for long-term support.

Electric vs. Gas

The SP140 is built around quiet, low-maintenance electric flight, with a gas powertrain option for pilots who need 2+ hour range or road refueling.

SP140 V2.5 Electric paramotor — carbon fiber frame and red anodized hardware
ElectricInstant, quiet, reliable.
SP140 V2.5 ICE paramotor with gasoline engine
GasLong range.
Category
Electric
Gas
Noise
80 dB
90 dB
Operating Cost
$0.60/hr
$11.69/hr
Flight Time
50–80 min
180 min
Startup
Instant
Pull start
Maintenance
Near zero
Regular service
Vibration
None
Significant
Emissions
Zero
Exhaust
Portability
5 min pack
Fuel handling
Winner
7 of 8
1 of 8
SP140 with electric powertrainSP140 with gas powertrain
Electric
Gas

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The Cost of Flying

You save

$3,992

flying electric over 3 years

Hours per month10
Electric 3-yr cost

$216

Gas 3-yr cost

$4,208

Electric
Gas
Cost per hour$0.60$11.69
Monthly (10 hrs)$6$117
Yearly$72$1,403
3-year total$216$4,208

Electric cost based on average US electricity rates (EIA). Gas cost includes fuel, oil, and typical maintenance.

The Flying Experience

Freedom above everything

Paramotor pilot silhouetted against a golden sunset

Chase the golden hour

Flying with an OpenPPG paramotor high above the landscape

Unlimited views

OpenPPG paramotor packed and ready for transport

Pack it. Go anywhere.

Paramotor pilots gathered in a community fly-in

Join the community

Paramotor launching from a grassy field

Your backyard is the airport.

Pilots Love OpenPPG

The SP140 has truly simplified my setup. I now lay out the wing, strap into the harness, and when I'm ready to go, I grab the controller from the side pocket of the harness, tap and hold the arm button, and within a few seconds it's ready to launch. While cruising around with my new Spider 26M, I've averaged around 30 minutes of flight time using the smaller 2.6kWh battery. The throttle on the SP140 is extremely linear throughout the entire range, making cruise control settings simple and precise. Everyone knows it's powerful, quieter, and smoother — but a pleasant surprise for me came when I moved the unit around. The battery slides out in seconds, I then throw the unit over one shoulder and carry it with ease. I've been flying PPG since 2003, and the SP140 has added a whole new dimension and a more peaceful feeling to my flights.

Gary Carter

May 14, 2026

SP140 V2.5 Electric

Received my new SP140 this week, got it assembled and took a first flight yesterday — what a great machine. I chose the small 2.6kWh battery for weight reasons (I'm 70 now) and still able to foot launch, although I have a trike I mainly use to drive down the road to my LZ. First flight using 80% of the battery netted me 27 minutes, so I'm also pleased with the duration. At 170 lbs flying a 23M Macpara Colorado, the SP140 has more thrust and is much quieter than what I'm used to, and only a few pounds heavier with the half-size battery. The weight CG is closer and higher on your back, so it actually feels lighter.

Rick Grimm

May 8, 2025

SP140 V2.5 Electric

I recently received my order for a SP140 V2.5 Electric Motor Conversion kit and I couldn't be more impressed! Packaging was very well done with everything protected by the foam box and all parts logically arranged. The quality of the parts is immediately apparent starting with the beautiful red and black anodizing on the motor, motor mounts, and battery. The rainbow shimmer of the titanium hardware adds to the effect. Just like a little kid on Christmas, I quickly assembled the parts (minimal effort required) after watching Paul's assembly video on YouTube. After putting a 40% charge on the Li-Ion battery I did a test run up of the system and everything performed flawlessly. After the initial torque of the start-up, the unit is amazingly smooth and balanced — a considerable difference from my previous experiences with 2-stroke combustion engines.

Ed Haas

May 9, 2026

SP140 V2.5 Electric

I love being able to break the machine down and put it in the back of my car without smell or leaving stains. Less maintenance for this dad means more time in the air and on the ground with the kids. If something breaks, I can often 3D print it.

Jim

April 19, 2026

SP140 V2.5 Electric

Overall I'm happy with the unit. I'd say at the given price point the pros outweigh the cons. I do want to add that I'm extremely impressed with your business here Paul. From design, production, support, etc. it's all pretty cool. Pros: Simple and clean design. Paramotor is nice and compact. The motor bolted onto the unit perfectly. Assembly was a breeze. The gas tank is super easy to fill. Good design on that. Great price for getting into the sport with brand new equipment. Even though I list some cons below, it's still better than paying an additional $3-4k for a Parajet. Cons: I'm not a fan of the cross bar for the pull start (Moster 185). When I first added it, the clamp fitting would slide as force was applied when pull starting. I think just leaving the standard pull start would be better, even if the angle isn't as good. Now I just use my battery start and that solved the problem all together. I don't like the slip fittings for the hoop. However, I went around and added small cotter pins on each of the hoop slip joints to make it more secure. For me, I have a van for transport so I never plan on disassembling the paramotor. It doesn't look as clean with the cotter pins, but it's more functional for me. Before adding this mod, I had multiple times on launch where the hoop opened up and got tangled with the glider lines. I don't like the 3d printed bracket to attach the top frame to the bottom frame. I've had a few flights where one of them popped off on one side. I ended up wrapping the 3d printed bracket with a couple extra zip ties and that's doing good for me. Suggested Mods For where the upper swing arms attach to the frame, I ended swapped out the provided bolt with a longer one. I did this to double nut each bolt. With the original setup, they would come loose over a few flights. With the double bolt setup, you can get the desired swingarm snugness, then back the bolts into each other so it never moves.

Scott Skeen

May 10, 2026 · Auburn, CA

SP140 V2.5 ICE

I love the unit, but I should have bought the electric one! I thought the Vittorazi engine would give me more hours of flight, but the truth is that it always needs adjustment for the carburetor, and as a bad mechanic I always mess it up a little. I love the idea of your project — open source is my life (I'm a software engineer) — and keep doing what you're doing. I dream of the electric version: 0 problems, 0 adjustments, pure fun!

Vova Cooper

May 7, 2026

SP140 V2.5 ICE

I love my SP140! It's the weight of an Atom 80, but with the power of a Moster 185.

Sebastian Lofaro

May 12, 2026

SP140 V2.5 Electric

I stopped flying paramotors in 2018 but kept following the development of the electric paramotors with curiosity. Finally bought my SP140 a year ago. I still mainly do XC freeflying but to complement that the electric has been fantastic, allowing me to sneak out for an early morning or late evening scenic flight every now and then. Having two batteries makes sense — getting more airtime per trip to the field. I did update the frame to a Kangook to get more sturdiness and faster setup from the car boot. Overall it has been a great experience and I look forward to the future advancements in battery technology.

Harri

May 6, 2026 · Portugal

SP140 V2.5 Electric

It is a very well thought-out and compact solution. The modular design makes it extremely easy to replace any damaged frame section if needed, so there is no need to buy a completely new setup — only the damaged parts need to be replaced. Assembly and disassembly are also very convenient and well designed.

Kuldar Timmusk

May 26, 2026

As a long-time P3 pilot, switching to the SP140 was an easy decision. After two one-hour flights I still had 24% battery left. It's smooth, quiet, and perfect for those of us who don't need three-hour flights — just a clean, reliable way to get our sky fix.

John H.

Facebook

SP140 V2.5 Electric

After years on a 2-stroke, switching to the SP140 was a relief. No oil, no gas, no constant wrenching. It's cleaner, quieter, doesn't vibrate, and delivers strong thrust. For me, electric just makes flying simpler.

Antonio T.

Facebook

SP140 V2.5 Electric

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