-Which bike did you get the top speed and acceleration times on, 10kW or 20kW? The numbers would be surprising for the lower powered bike.
10kW motors
-What's the charger wattage? They say under 8 hours on their site but that's not very precise and it doesn't say which battery capacity that's for.
Its a weaker charger, they have 2 models, a 700 and a 1200 watt unit I think. I'd love to get them charging faster.
-Are those really Brembos up front on the 300?
I think they were, but we reccomended they ditch them, totally not needed.
-Did you get a chance to weigh any of the bikes?
We did not weigh them as we were not there long enough and there wasn't an easy way to do it. They felt extremely light like an FX
-What's the pricing like for the different models and capacities? They only list a single price for each model on the site which I assume is for the lowest capacity.
I think the prices on the site are for what they have in stock. It was something tlike 6500-7900 range. I'm sure if you wanted one of the 300x bikes, they would have one for you soon. You just need to ask.
-Nice to hear that they're taking on board all of your concerns and making the bikes better, however what happens about the ones they've already sold? I'd be pissed if I bought a bike and then a couple weeks or months later an improved version came out, and if I was in the market to buy one it would make me wait (and possibly use that time to save up and get something else).
Welcome to being an early adopter. HAs happened with Zeros every other year after the new models specs were released.
For the extra grand it seems like you get a good upgrade with the 300, double the power, upside down forks, possibly Brembos.
Agreed.
Unfortunately range seems low so you'd need an 11kW/h model to compete with a 7.2kW/h Zero, at which point pricing could be within a grand or less.
Incorrect. Physics is physics and the data confirms it. The 7kWh zero does not do 70 miles of range at 60-65mph. The 11kWh Boom does. It is just shy of Zeros 14.4 and energicas 13.4 ranges.
Zeros website claims the 7kWh specs for this speed at 45-55 miles range, somewhere around 30-50% less than the booms tested and confirmed range, and Zeros figures are always inflated on their website. Sustained top speed is 80mph for the 7kwh zero, so about onpar with the boom.
The boom is definately a better deal for what you get, but the Zero is definately higher quality. Its really about what you need/want. The boom and Zero are not really comparable apples to apples as the main difference for the price is quality vs quantity. Boom went with quantity for the price, and Zero went with quality for the price. I think both bikes have their own markets and will do well together in the same garage.