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Segway Ninebot KickScooter Air T15 $799 (Was $1299) + Delivery ($0 C&C/ in-Store) @ JB Hi-Fi

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Overview
Ninebot KickScooter Air T15 is the most compact, lightweight, and energy-efficient electric kickscooter ever introduced to navigate in a city environment.

The design is a perfect fit for the urban lifestyle and is best for completing your last-mile commute, carrying on mass transportation and storing in cars. The unique sleek and futuristic appearance of the Air T15 makes it one of a kind from other scooters in the market.

Fold-In-Half With 23cms Height
Unlike many other folding kickscooters available in the market, Air T15 folds in half just like a paper. Once folded, Air T15 is only 8.7 inches in height. The folded body size is flat and compact, which can be easily stored whether it’s on the subway or in your car trunk.

One-sec Folding Mechanism with Retractable Handlebars
The Air T15 can be folded in half with just one click. When the KickScooter is folded, the handlebar will self-retract, leaving you with a hassle-free user experience like no other.

Four Riding Modes
The four riding modes allow riders to switch easily based on riding occasions. Such modes include Pedestrian Mode, Energy-saving Mode, Standard Mode and Sport Mode with a preset speed limit of 6 km/h, 10 km/h, 15 km/h, and 20 km/h respectively.

Innovative Regenerative Braking System
The innovative regenerative brake system turns your e-scooter into an electric vehicle powered by electricity and recycled energy from riding. The wheels are able to transform the energy that is captured during braking into power and to store it in the integrated lithium battery pack.

Key Features

One-sec Folding

IPX4 Weather Resistant

Bezel-less Dashboard

Cruise Control

Retractable Handlebar

Power Switch /Fender Brake

4 Riding Modes

Built-in Front and Rear LED Lights

Segway-Ninebot App with Bluetooth Connectivity

Please Note: Each state and territory in Australia has a different set of rules and regulations pertaining to the usage of e-scooters and e-boards (including where e-scooters and e-boards can legally be used and whether e-scooters and e-boards need to be registered with the relevant road traffic authority). Any user of this product must ensure that that they check and abide by their local by-laws and use responsibly. Ride with caution and always wear a helmet and protective gear when riding your e-scooter and e-board.

Once again, Enjoy!!

Related Stores

JB Hi-Fi
JB Hi-Fi

closed Comments

  • +10

    Cheaper elsewhere.

    $699 at PC Byte + Delivery (~$9.90) or if you have eBay Plus: $674.15 Delivered at their eBay store - code PLUSFL15.

    • wow. this should be posted.

    • -2

      Even so, given it’s minuscule range what exactly are you paying for here?

      • Size, weight, design.

        • Pfft. Nice try. Low size and weight come with super low range. So design.

          • +5

            @Lps: You have to keep in mind that different people may have different needs to you. Not everyone needs 20km range if all they do is 4km a day. They'd rather get a smaller, lighter scooter that's easier to carry.

            You may be surprised but it's not an uncommon thing for people to pay more for convenience. Ultrabooks are less powerful and more expensive than full-blown laptops but they're lighter, thinner, and have sleeker designs. People happily pay for them because they do what they need. There is absolutely no point in buying a Core i9 monster laptop with an RTX3070 if all they're doing is MS Office and web browsing.

  • +1

    need to be registered with the relevant road traffic authority

    How?

    • +1

      you cant lol (at least not in most states)

  • Any good?

    • -2

      Does it matter? You can't ride it legally in Sydney anyway…

      • there are many places you can ride it legally in Sydney, just not on the road (which this one honestly doesn't look suitable for anyway)

        • there are many places you can ride it legally in Sydney

          Which public places can you ride it in?

          • @jv: Yeah. Keen to know. Which public place we can legally ride it.

        • Nor on any public footpaths.

      • “ If a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so.” Thomas Jefferson.

        • If a law is unjust

          That is subjective. Legal systems should not be subjective.

      • People still live in Sydney. How 2020

      • +1

        I bet you're fun at parties

        • Betting can become addictive.

  • is the range just 15 km?

    • Yep, absolute joke, prob way less if you are at the Max weight end I'm guessing

    • According to ESG, 6.8kms real world.

      • 😂 Omg, that really is terrible

        • +2

          To be fair, the blurb does specifically say it's for an 'urban lifestyle' and is 'best for completing your last-mile commute'. It's not aimed at people who want to travel across suburbs into the city, it's aimed at people who want to ride it on the 1.5km trip to the train station from home, then the 500m trip to the office at the other end. There's no point carrying a full-sized heavy/bulky scooter for short trips.

          • @eug: Spend half it's lifetime on the charger, definitely no thanks. Waste of money compared to better value such as the Xaiomi.

            • +2

              @Damonator84:

              Spend half it's lifetime on the charger, definitely no thanks.

              Likewise someone could say "Why should I carry a bulky 14.2kg scooter for zero benefit to me when I can carry a much slimmer scooter that's 10.2kg?"

              Waste of money compared to better value such as the Xaiomi.

              Would you say a 1.1kg 13" ultrabook is a waste of money compared to a 2.2kg 15.6" gaming laptop if the user only needs it to use MS Office and browse the web?

  • +1

    So sad cant use any of these in Sydney…. :(

    • +1

      not in public.

      you can ride them in your backyard though…

      • +1

        Well, if I can replace the wheels with some monster truck wheels then may be good.. :D

  • +2

    5 star review on jb
    15km is laughable

    the cons

    1). 15km top range is not as much as you might think
    2). its still heavier then the e22 scooter (but it folds better and is easier to roll around like a suit case)

    3). it also may overheat of warmer days
  • Using WA here as an example:

    E-scooter rules and regulations in WA
    "Compliant e-scooters can only be legally ridden on low speed WA public roads and paths if their maximum power output is no more than 200 watts and they cannot travel more than 10 km/h on level ground"

    That rules out anything over the eKickscooter E10 AFAICT, which payload is rated at 20-60kg..

  • I wonder if you could take it on the plane as carry-on or in luggage. (for QLD holidays)

    • +2

      It would be considered a powered mobility device - there are guidelines on your airline's dangerous goods page.

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