I can understand how Zero forces you to unlock things and Energica gives you everything. At the same time, this could be an advantage with respect to battery capacity for a lot of people. By not making the full capacity available, people can’t really charge it to 100% and this well help with battery degradation. I am not sure I’d often need the extra range anyway. It could be useful to have a subscription option though to increase it if I wanted to go on a trip and raise it for that period of time. Reverse would be nice to have. I get the subscription model and in general hate it. I’d also have to lug around extra weight that I am getting no benefit for. At the same time, I can easily upgrade later if I decide I want it. That aspect worked out well my wife’s Tesla where I wanted more performance and was able to unlock it. It knocked off over a half second from the 0-60 time; 4.2 to 3.6 and was well worth the money.
Agreed. I've always understood why people were upset about the Cypher store (and some things about it are just pure cash grabs, like $200 for reverse or to enable heated grips), but I always look at things from a value for money POV and I'd rather have an upgrade that downloads over-the-air than have to take it to a dealer who keeps the bike for days or weeks and installs a part upside-down and backwards.
I get the part where customer support may be better for Energica, but an 8 hour round trip minimum to the nearest dealer is a real downside for me. Just one unplanned trip would be a major inconvenience and I couldn’t easily ride the bike there.
8 hours is a major distance! That would also give me pause.
I plan on keeping it for a while so if there was an issue with the battery down the road, I’d have more coverage with Zero. Both batteries are air cooled but the forced air cooling on the Zero could be an advantage in some of the riding situations I would be in. The liquid cooling of the Energica for the motor would be a big plus.
The failure rate of Energica's packs is a small fraction of Zero's. I finally heard of someone in the FB group who had theirs fail recently (not the charging fuse, but the pack itself). Until then, I had never heard of that happening.
I went and rode a Zero SR/S today. It actually matched up pretty well on the test ride I took. The one big plus with the Zero is I can get a fully faired bike (a big plus for me) and I have pretty comfy ergonomics on it. Overall the bike was a lot quieter when riding. No chain noise and a lot less high pitched whine going on.
I liked the SR/S that I rented in Arizona, and I agree about belts. I didn't really prefer it to my 2017 SR, though, since it wasn't as upright of a riding position and I liked the "dumb" display and firmware of the older bike that didn't nanny or annoy me. The SS9, OTOH, blew my old SR away! By the time I got it, the SR/S ride was too far in the past to compare them directly, but I have no doubt that the SS9 would win that comparison for me.
Good to know about the gearing change for the Ribelle. That is one good thing about chain and sprocket but I have a few bikes and keeping the chains lubed is one of my least favorite tasks, especially when no center stand. I didn’t see one it and that is a big miss and I hate dealing with a lift as I have to adjust it for each bike I have without a centerstand.
Agreed on chains. Philosophically, I have no problem maintaining my chain. In the real world, though, I just don't do it. No cleanings, no lubings, no checking the tension. When a mechanic tells me I'm taking my life into my hands, that's when I know it's time to get a new chain to neglect! Or a new bike...
The Experia ticks a lot of my boxes so maybe worth trying to test ride one if I can find a dealer. Maybe it isn’t quite as slow as I think it will be. I drive EVs all day long so I get the instant torque aspect. My daily driver may not beat a Ribelle or Ego to 60 mph, but it is at least as quick from 30 mph on up and will probably go through the traps quicker. I want my bike to be at least as quick as my daily driver car. If they had gone with the previous drivetrain and made it more like my V-4 Ducati Multistrada, I’d be all in with a deposit on one now. I think its performance is going to be like an old Suzuki 1000cc Vstrom in the quarter mile and I had one of those and it was pretty boring and adding a load just made it worse.
The early reviewers who rode them in the Dolomites said the Experias didn't feel any slower than the existing models, even though they were down on power. Peak torque at the rear wheel is still 900 ft/lbs vs 1,000 on the old models, and the peak 102 HP is only 7 less than my 13.4 kWh SS9 that weighs 50 extra lbs but still manages 0-60 in 3.0s. I bet Energica will offer a more powerful engine option when they re-design the bike in 5-7 years, but for now I think they wanted to maximize the range.