My post on Brammo's FB page and their response:
"Good for Brammo! What about us customers? Am I going to be able to get clutch plates and tranny gears and electronic parts on my Empulse in say, 3 or 4 years from now?"
"Hi Bill - Yes, rest assured you will. Polaris will honor all Brammo’s warranty and future parts availability obligations for Empulse and Enertia."
I hope something amazing happens here. I lost my dealer less than two weeks after I bought my Enertia+. I had problems, which the dealer wasn't competent to handle (they also do BMW and Tri, and I'm really not even comfortable bringing my BMW to them). I had problems, Adam went above and beyond and got my E+ sorted out just fine.
Where it gets interesting: Rumor is they're going to be bought by the mega-center here (multi-brand house, multi-function; street bikes, quads, jetskits, etc). They do carry Polaris, so there's that. But, today I noticed what I think is some small leak coming off my fork leg. The BMW dealer hasn't carried Brammo for... 8-10 months, and they're not acquired by the mega-center yet.
Fortunately, not owning a Zero, I have name-brand forks that'll be easy for any shop to service, but are they warranty? I don't know, and if they are, no idea how to go about getting them serviced.
I do hope that Polaris keeps the Enertia line going in addition to the Empulse; a low-end commuter bike is just fine for a lot of folks... the E+ is on par (performance, range on one 'fill') as a DRZ-400SM, and costs about 30% more. The Empulse is about on par with my 1999 BMW (again, range performance) and again, 30% more. Than a bike that's 16 years old. That is to say, it performs on par with a 16 year old ICE bike. I can't see paying 30% more than I did for 16 year old performance, but for the E+ it's a reasonable expenditure, still in the 4 digit range.
HD's really off-base with the Livewire, and if Polaris sinks its teeth in to electric Victories I think that's likewise a mistake; the buyers of those brands and models find the noise and rumble and vibration part and parcel with the design, as much a part of the bike as comfy seating and excessive amounts of chrome. Polaris would be smart to pursue the path that Brammo has, both high and low end.