Congrats on the purchase Clee!.:-)
Thanks also for sharing your experience so far. I found your comment about the grip particularly interesting. Yet another example of why Zero really must implement traction control. I'm enjoying having traction control back with the CBR1000R I bought a couple of weeks ago. I haven't ridden the bike anywhere near it's limits yet, but traction control will help me explore them. When I get competent enough I can turn it off, if I wish, but in the meantime it's a godsend!
So please do continue posting here. I was very, very tempted by an Eva myself but in the end it was the range, cost and weight that killed it for me. However, I would love to hear that you are enjoying the bike. I'm hoping I've bought my last petrol bike. After owning a Zero for over two years, it felt like I was buying a steam engine! Still, it's bloody good fun so I'm not complaining. :-)
Heh. Well, it took the better part of a month, but that kafkaesque nightmare had only just begun, it turns out!
I took the EVA out for a ride as soon as it arrived, even though I didn't have plates yet, and then I had to go check out the local fast charger and get a feel for my new bike. I also swung by my local motorcycle mechanic's shop because I love those guys and I figured they'd get a kick out of seeing the first Energica in the state. But after getting home, I realized I should probably get the temporary plate and tags so that I could ride it without getting arrested.
And that's when the nightmare resumed in full. Apparently, because I was the first person in Colorado to buy an Energica, they didn't exist in the state DMV database. And temporary tags are generated from a form on the computer that has dropdowns for make and model, and they can't generate temporary tags without them. Long story short, it took almost a full month of waiting after initially trying to get my tags before the DMV called me to let me know that the database had finally been updated and they were ready. For the steep price of $7.00, I got my tags just in time for it to start snowing here. (Thankfully, there have been a few warm-enough days since, and I've put almost 200 miles on the bike in the past week or so.)
I totally empathize with being scared away by the range/cost/weight. They're all not nearly as great as they would be in a perfect world. I have to say though, the weight is really only an issue at slow speeds/stops for me; in motion, the EVA feels feather-light and more responsive than seems physically possible. I'm also really hoping that sometime in the near-ish future, someone will figure out a massive breakthrough in battery tech and I'll be able to upgrade to a (say) lithium-metal replacement pack that, say, triples or quadruples the range. Or I'll just save up for that LS-218...
I didn't realize it at the time, but I'm fairly confident that the Ducatis I bought a few years ago were the last ICE-powered vehicles I'll ever buy. Unless I eventually get my pilot's license and buy a plane, and some of those are even starting to go electric...
Clee, Congratulations on getting the Eva and welcome to the Eva club! I have a little over 5K miles on mine and your initial observations are spot on. I also have an SR and agree with your comparisons. The Eva really does pull a lot harder than the SR. Heck it also pulls harder than my KTM 1290 SA. Over 4th of July I rode my Eva out to western NC and rode Tail of the Dragon and many other roads out there. While it is easy to understand how folks would be concerned about the weight of the Eva it really does a lot better in tight twisties than you would think it would.
Thanks! I find myself torn between wanting to let EVERYONE ride it because it's so incredible and being terrified that someone will instantly destroy my expensive, not-yet-paid-off-in-full, new favorite toy.
Have you played with the regen settings yet? I started out on medium and then tried the high setting. It was really easy to modulate the regen so it comes on really smooth and love the adjustability and you find yourself rarely using the brakes to slow down. The regen on the Eva is really what most people with Zero's are hoping for. The brake lights and ABS are tied into the regen and if you rapidly cut the throttle when you are doing 70 MPH or so you will quickly understand why this is important. Energica really got regen right.
I've definitely been playing with the regen settings, and I find that I'm flicking through those settings WAY more often than I thought I would while riding. At this point, I've already memorized that screen, so I can navigate it entirely by feel without having to look down at the LCD. Around town, I stick to Urban (or even Eco mode sometimes, like in parking lots) and max regen, but when I'm on the freeway, I tend to kick it into Sport mode and disable regen entirely. I'm actually getting 70-80 miles per charge, which is still disappointing, but slightly less so.
I also just started a new job at Panasonic, and the office is a good 30 miles away, which is juuuust far enough that I'd probably have some range anxiety leaving with a full charge in the morning... except there are at least 8 J1772 chargers in the work parking lot, apparently they're all powered by the solar panels on the roof, and best of all: they're 100% free. So the EVA is working out great as a commuter bike, when the weather is warm enough.