Zero Motorcycles Sr/s
Zero SR/S został wprowadzony na rynek w 2020 roku jako pierwszy w pełni udoskonalony motocykl elektryczny Zero Motorcycles, co stanowi znaczące odejście od nagiej platformy SR/F, na której został oparty. Został zaprojektowany, aby oferować lepszą aerodynamikę i możliwości turystyki długodystansowej, z zintegrowaną owiewką opracowaną we współpracy z Huge Design. SR/S stał się godny uwagi jako motocykl elektryczny klasy premium sport-touring, atrakcyjny dla kierowców poszukujących zarówno osiągów, jak i zasięgu w eleganckim, chronionym przed wiatrem pakiecie.
110 hp
Moc
190 Nm
Moment obrotowy
220 kg
Waga
200 km/h
Prędkość maksymalna
Equivalent to approximately 1.5–2.0 L/100km (energy consumption ~4.5–5.5 kWh/100km typical real-world)
Paliwo
Fair
Ciało
Co kupujący powinni wiedzieć
Battery Longevity Matters
The SR/S uses a Z-Force lithium battery rated for over 200,000 miles of charge cycles, but early 2020-2021 models had occasional BMS (battery management system) software glitches — always check for updated firmware before buying used.
Steep Depreciation Curve
Zero SR/S bikes depreciate significantly in the first 2-3 years, often losing 30-40% of MSRP, which makes buying a lightly used model a strong value play compared to purchasing new.
Unique Charging Flexibility
The SR/S comes standard with a 6kW onboard charger, and an optional Power Tank accessory can extend range by roughly 20%, a rare upgrade feature that meaningfully boosts real-world usability.
Pokolenia i specyfikacje według roku
Początkowe uruchomienie SR/S; pełna owiewka, akumulator 14,4 kWh, zasięg 110 mil, zintegrowany Bosch Motorsport IMU.
Zaktualizowane oprogramowanie, ulepszone opcje ładowania, udoskonalona elektronika; w dużej mierze przeniesione mechanicznie od generowania startu.
Recenzja używanego kupującego
"Best used electric bike available, but buy smart and verify battery health."
$9,000-$14,000 usedThe SR/S is genuinely impressive tech wrapped in a motorcycle that actually handles. Used examples from 2020 onwards are worth serious consideration, but do your homework first. Battery health is everything here — insist on a full diagnostic readout showing charge cycles and capacity retention. Anything below 85% capacity should knock serious money off the asking price, and walk away from anything that can't produce that data. Range anxiety is real but manageable once you accept this isn't a touring bike. City and commuter use is where it shines — the torque delivery is addictive and the riding modes give you genuine flexibility. The fairing makes a real difference to highway comfort versus the naked SR/F. Software updates have improved a lot of early quirks, so check the firmware version is current. Dealer support remains the weak link. Zero's network is thin, and independent mechanics are still learning. Budget for that uncertainty. Mechanically there's almost nothing to go wrong — no clutch, no gearbox, minimal brake wear from regeneration. But electrical gremlins on early units were frustrating.
Recommended Gear & Accessories
Full Specifications
Rivals & Alternatives
Bikes that buyers cross-shop with the Zero Motorcycles Sr/s

Kawasaki Ninja 1000sx

Kawasaki Ninja H2 Sx

Energica Ego

Energica Ego+

Gogoro Super Sport
Compare Zero Motorcycles Sr/s Side-by-Side
compare_arrowsSpecs, power, weight & buyer verdict — head-to-head with the bikes most often cross-shopped.
Zero Motorcycles Sr/s vs Kawasaki Ninja 1000sx
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Zero Motorcycles Sr/s vs Energica Ego+
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Zero Motorcycles Sr/s vs Gogoro Super Sport
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