I don't know about you, but after experiencing a rear wheel spin or two with my heavy (as Zeros go) Zero, I am not sure that I would want to own a Lightning that didn't have traction control.
What is really going on at Lightning and how they plan to market, service and support the vehicles that they plan to sell to customers is a mystery to me. Right now they seem to be following the Amazon approach. You order it online and it gets shipped to your home. After that, who knows what happens?
What seemed to be going on in 2014 was that the LS-218 model would be sold as a racing bike to promoters who wanted to race them in exhibitions. My recollection is that Richard said at the time that he had orders for 8 of those bikes from a promoter in Europe who planned to do just that. However, I never heard any more about that deal.
At the same time, I heard that Lightning would be manufacturing a production street version for the average Joe, which would be selling for something around $15K. The red bike in the attached photo is that model. While it looked nice, the specifications claimed at the time didn't seem up to the performance and range of the 2014 Zero S that I rode down to the EV event where the photo was taken during the fall of 2014.
The reason that I am so skeptical regarding this whole subject is that it reminds me of my experience with Electric Motorsport, which was assembling GPR-S electric motorcycles in Oakland, CA. They starting selling them in 2008 and I bought mine from the Electric Green Store in Redwood City, just a block away from Best Buy in the spring of 2009. The GPR-S was selling for $8,300 at the time. However, mine caught on fire after only 300 miles, so I returned it to the factory and asked them to repair it under their 1-year warranty, as mentioned on their website. However, I was told that the bike could not be repaired, as the manufacturer of the charger/BMS was no longer in business and I was just out of luck, warranty or no warranty.
However, they offered to sell me another Sepex-powered GPR-S for an additional $1,500. Then when I visited the factory with cash in hand, I was told that they couldn't accept my money as they had lost their DMV retail license a couple of months ago and I would have to return to the Electric Green Store and buy it there. Which I did. But after the bike was registered with the DMV and before I could pick it up, EMS returned to the shop and grabbed the bike and returned it to their "factory", where they gave it a new VIN and changed the manufacturing date on the VIN sticker from 2009 to 2010.
Once they did that, they returned the bike to the Electric Green Store, who had to return to the DMV, cancel the original VIN documentation and record a new VIN and manufacturing date for the bike that I had already paid for. Eventually, the sale was straightened out, but it took a couple of months and really left me with a bad feeling about the electric motorcycle industry at the time. Less than a year later, the Brammo Enertia was being marketed by Best Buy down the street and the Electric Green Store went out of business. The owner told me that one of the reasons they had to fold was that they just couldn't handle all of the warranty claims that their electric vehicle customers were experiencing at the time and they were getting no support from EMS. Anyway, I tell this story as a cautionary tale regarding startup vehicle manufacturers that seem to have no marketing or servicing infrastructure in place.