I enjoyed the article and video. I do wish he would share first impressions of a bike and then provide an overview of the experience. My personal opinion is, the price point is a bit high for the bikes spec sheet and it's intended use case. Hopefully I will get a chance to demo one at some point, looks like a fun ride.
Do you think they (livewire co in this case) provide the reviewer the owners manual to read.
Normally a manufacture provides a packet with stock photos and technical information about the bike being tested.
Since a full spec sheet for the Del Mar has not been released yet, I doubt Harley would provide Micah information about the bike that could not be publicly shared.
A lot missing here, traction control or lack of.
The photo in the link below shows both TC and ABS icons on the dash of the Del Mar. If Harley wants to sell the bike in Europe TC and ABS are required as part of the Euro5 standard.
https://www.motorcycle.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/051022-2023-livewire-s2-del-mar-display-and-app.pngI think that Micah's estimate that the pack size would be between 9.5 and 10.5 kWh. If you use Harley's claimed 110 mile city (SAE J2982) range and the efficiency (wh/mi) of a Zero SR the result is a theoretical pack size of 9.7 kWh.
Zero SR
Weight 419 lbs
Range (City) 163 miles
Battery size 14.4kWh
Wh/mi 88.34 = 14400 / 163
Harley Del Mar
Weight 431 lbs
Range (City) 110 miles
Wh/mi 88.34 (taken from Zero SR)
88.34 = x / 110 = Battery size (kWh) = 9.72
Using that battery size and the claimed 75 min charge time from 20-80% the onboard charger should be rated at ~ 4.5 kWh
9.72 / 4.5 = 2.16 * 60% = 78 minutes