The Apollo Go brings many of Apollo's features to riders at a new lower price. Is the new Apollo Go electric scooter the right option for you? Watch to find out!
Finally a review highlighting the notch on the steering. It can’t be a feature, it literally makes turning difficult when you’re going slow and making little dodges. The rest of the scooter is great, built like a brick and fast for a smaller scooter.
Directional notch is industrial code word for pitted head set, a common wear and tear on the way the bearings got seated incorrectly, they tell stupid customers it’s a feature rather than a flaw in the build, seems like we got one of them commenting as such. Pitted head set bearing goes back since the 1940’s before sealed bearings which came out in the 1990’s Directional notch is a feature for those looking for something to describe shit level QC . Keep on believing… Good catch on the flaw electrek. You know what is correct vs a feature.
@@a.nevillechamberlain7612 mine just arrived this week and it took customer support almost 3 days to act ignorant about a notch in the steering. this thing is downright dangerous and erratic to ride at the moment.
Thanks for the review. I'm shopping suspension scooters, but the weird strap, 9" tires(harder to buy), the must have app, inconsistent quality(although probably correctable by the buyer), and I'm not keen on that phone thing glued to the stem. Still, in the $1K price range it looks good, I'm hoping Apollo can get it together.
You should ask the manufacturer if they have test footage of the vehicle going over various size/depth pot holes and various speeds. It would be very interesting to see what the scooter (and driver) can handle.
How does this Apollo model compare to the original Unagi dual motor scooter? Same distance per charge? My Unagi only gets 2-3 miles per 7hr charge. Thanks for your review & content!
The notch on mine is also very noticeable to the point of feeling unstable. I wish I'd seen this review before buying. I may have avoided it. Who intentionally puts a notch on a scooter!??
Then they’re all defective 😂 It’s a dangerous “design” if so, you never want to inhibit turning with a sudden resistance because micromovements in the steering is how a rider balances. There’s a reason no other bike, scooter, motorcycle, or two wheeled vehicle does.
@@mikehagquist5198 thank you for telling me that I had a couple apollo Scooters about four years ago three years ago. I really like this one thank you for telling me that.
COMO DESARROLLAR CONCIENCIA ESPIRITUAL Con el patinete eléctrico 1- velocidad aconsejable 20 kms 2- aceleraciones suaves y progresivas, igual máxima comodidad y seguridad 3- ceder el paso a todos los peatones posibles en tú trayecto, igual a máximos actos de conciencia 4- agradece a los conductores que te ceden el paso, igual a educación espiritual 5- tu relajación y evolución será progresiva a más tiempo más actos de conciencia, igual a pura inteligencia.
Apollo has the best quality control. Best packaging. Yes $ is a lil high but you get what you pay for. And the notch takes a cunt hair of force to move it. Took me 3 months to even know there was a notch. It’s not dangerous at all. Especially on a scooter that goes running speed.
Sounds like your notch wasn’t as noticeable as mine, that’s good. Though there shouldn’t be any. There’s no reason for it to be there (unless cheaping out in a stabilizer for straight parking) and it’s only a hindrance. There’s a reason no other two wheeler has indexed steering.