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Inappropriate roads: Sure looks pretty up there though, right? I thought that tight little mountain road (note the lack of lane dividers) would be an absolutely perfect place for the Zero. Tight enough for handling to not be overwhelmed by the lack of speed. Since the range wouldn't allow it, I wasn't able to make an informed decision, that was the first time we'd tried it on actual corners.
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Welcome to the board, Wes.
There was nothing wrong with the tight little mountain road segment. It was a great place to load up a Zero and take it to test on. Then load it back up again after the test and take it home. Then charge it up, load it up, and take it on some dirt roads the next day, load it up, and take it home. Then you could have actually spent time reviewing how it worked where it was designed to work, instead of taking up half the video intentionally running it out of power in the worst place possible that you intentionally chose to run it out of power.
I hear you are testing a Tuono V4 today. Are you going to test and see if it has the same range and comfort on a long highway road trip as a Honda Goldwing? When you don't get as far as a Honda Goldwing you have going along with it, are you going to run the Tuono V4 out of gas intentionally, and pee on your leg on the side of the road again, complaining about how dangerous it is to run out of fuel? After you intentionally watch it run out of fuel on the side of the road, are you going to dedicate half your video to how crappy it is compared to a Goldwing for long highway road trips? Then say that it obviously is overpriced junk that only some smug young kids would like, who can only afford this bike because they live at home with their parents? (But don't worry, it will help them get laid by underage jr. high school girls.) Poke fun at them like you poked fun at dot com nerds?
Oh, and are you going to quote just the Tuono V4's highway or city MPG, and then claim it doesn't live up to that rating when you test it under the opposite conditions?
Probably not. You will likely take the Tuono v4 on some twisties. You might even load it up in a truck and take it to a track for a run, load it back up and bring it home and only review it on how well it does when ridden for the purpose it was intended. Because that is the professional way to test it.
I just don't think you will ever get it. Sure it is appropriate to point out a vehicle's limitations, if you do it honestly. Real world limitations are great stuff that should be included in any review. But to talk about city range, and then complain it doesn't meet that range on a highway test is nothing less than flat out lying to your audience. And people don't like being lied to. The funny thing is, I don't even really like the Zero DS, and this is the response your piece inspired....