No, I don’t see Lloyd complaining. Strange to me, as he admitted that he’s got $16,000 in his 2012, and with only 11,000 miles he was “happy with it and had no plans to sell itâ€, but in the end got $7000 from Zero for it. That’s pushing $1/mile!! Ouch. And you say he's “freakin happy†to fork over another $5800. Lloyd clearly has money to burn. Is that a prerequisite for Zero ownership nowadays?
I appreciate the effort you put into the 2017 suggestion. But even with everything you mention, I would be out $3000** for that specific bike. (Plus buying a bike sight unseen and having it shipped 2000 miles makes me nervous) Yes, it’s newer, faster, better, etc, but I don’t assign a lot of value to those things -- I liked my 2012 just fine. I think this is the key point where we don't see eye to eye.
Regarding your 2013/14 FX "profit" comment, the cheapest I see on cycle trader is $6k--given my $5k cash payout, I’d have to negotiate down to like $4k-$4.5k to cover shipping, taxes, etc to just break even. That's not realistic. Plus I really don't want a dirt bike.
Too bad Zero won't take just the batteries and leave me with the bike and $5k, I'd take that in a heartbeat! I'll keep my eyes open, and maybe someday I'll luck into a deal where I can get something for $5k. Finally, don’t get me wrong, I think that Zero is being fair, reasonable and responsible. But for now (you might call it complaining, but I see it as just a fact) I no longer have an electric ride, instead I've got a check/credit that’s not enough to buy an equivalent (or better) replacement.
**$8495 list,CT tax $539,dealer fees $1000,shipping $715,increased ins/reg $250,zero coupon -$1500,2012 trade-in -$6080,negotiating -$400