Well, that is a real shocker!
But only 218 units being called? I am pretty sure that Zero made more than that in 2012.
I hope the bike that I gave my daughter is covered by the recall. Now that she has my old 2014 S, she really doesn't need the 2012 and wanted to sell it on the open market - not an easy thing to do, of course. It would be a lot easier for her if SF Moto drove up to her home in Marin County, picked the bike up and gave her a check from Zero. That would help to clear out a little space in her garage too - as well as pay for a quarter's worth of a meal plan for the daughter who is attending UCLA and will soon be finishing her education at the Fri University in Berlin.
This recall is really going to cost Zero a bunch of bucks. Not only are they going to have to buy the bikes back (maybe $2K?), but paying a dealer to drive who knows how far to pick up a bike is not going to be cheap, either. Then the bikes will have to be shipped back to the factory and ultimately dismantled and recycled in some way.
I kind of wonder what happens to the 100 units sold to Columbia in December 2012 and the 57 leftover units sold to Hong Kong the following year?
It is expensive to be a vehicle manufacturer nowadays, especially when you are just a small fish in a big pond surrounded by lawyers and government regulators with big teeth.