Long a user of Arais, I bought the new RX7V to replace my festering and chipped GP. By Arai's pace of change it's radical. By everyone else it's a tweak. Here are my thoughts in a (head)shell should you be mulling buying one:
Arai (or rather its importer) made a thing about its relatively lower price compared with the older model and I'm reasonably satisfied with it. I fall for the 'Arai-is-safer' line. But as prices climb on the back of Brexit and weaker sterling I would think a lot harder before committing to the top-o'-the-range Arai.
- Ye Gods, it's tight to put on. I think this has to be down to Arai making it quieter, which it is compared with the previous model. Yes, the head sizes are identical. And after a bit of time wearing it it becomes as comfortable as the earlier Arais. But the squeeze to fit it on has barely become easier and I'm told it's reminiscent of Schuberth (which I never bought because they were..er...hard to fit on).
- The side pod fitment remains odd and not that intuitive but it's a heap better than the business of poking around with screwdrivers and snapping tangs. It also plays a role, I think, in the far better fitting of the visor (see below) which now has that satisfying 'thunk' when shut. Remember when Volkswagen used to brag about the sound its doors made when shutting? Like that.
- The visor open lever is bigger but a definite step back - to open the visor from snap-shut requires you to do two movements - pull down to release the visor and then push it up. Before, you simply wrenched it upwards. It makes it a slightly scary faff when enjoying a bit of velocity - four more microseconds of attention span given over to "do I need to pull down now or push up?".
- The visor is meatier. This is a good thing.
Arai (or rather its importer) made a thing about its relatively lower price compared with the older model and I'm reasonably satisfied with it. I fall for the 'Arai-is-safer' line. But as prices climb on the back of Brexit and weaker sterling I would think a lot harder before committing to the top-o'-the-range Arai.