I agree that most can't tell, can you tell the weight loss of a gal. of gas? I however had a Shoria lithium once that I bought to replace a bad lead acid type. Transferred it to my next three sleds. Started one sled at -15, a buddy had a lower capacity type that was way under rated and he simply had to press the start button a few times to heat up the battery. It always worked. One little know issue with most lithium types is they have individual cells that may need a special charger to maintain peak performance by balancing the cells to the correct voltage. My Shoria was that way, even though the sled charges it ride to ride I always used that special charger at the beginning of the season to properly balance the cells.Yeah, it's pretty hard to come up with two sleds to compare, let alone a good cross-section of riders. I'll agree with @turboless terry that a lot of riders couldn't tell, but maybe closer to 50-50 in a truly fair comparison. Minor differences between "identical" sleds, like more aggressive clutching or a louder can, would fool a lot of people in a back-to-back ride. I'm a little iffy on L-ion batteries as worth it. Cold starts are where I'd want e-start the most, and that's where L-ion could fall short unless you bring it inside. Discussions like this make me wonder if I'd lean more towards Doo if pull starting gets to be a hassle. As long as there's not too much pulling on a cold start (mine's a bear - - but I hear Doos are pretty easy), it seems SHOT gives you 90% of the advantage with only 20% more weight over pull start. If I needed e-start, and with an AGM battery weighing 12-14lbs but otherwise doing it's job better and cheaper than L-ion, I'd probably get the lightest AGM battery that'll work and call it a day.
Cinno