I car-top my current A.I. onto my small Kia Rio hatchback and it's probably already on the borderline of being too heavy.
I have plenty of dents in the roof which occurred when I was man-handling it into position. I can only imagine that another
12kgs of mass would cave-in the roof altogether.
Anyway, regardless of the anticipated benefits of the new A.I., here's my take on the things I'm not so keen on:
1: Weight - it was already a heavy lump, now it will be even more so.
2: Length (although it's only about 25cm longer, that makes it about 15cm too long for my garage

3: The seat - while it's certainly better than the old hobie-supplied seat, I feel it's too complex for
its own good. If it collapses/fails while out at sea in rough conditions, what can you do? With the old hobie
bum-soaker, at least it was pretty-much fool-proof. If you need to ditch the seat altogether (in an
emergency) you're left with a flat, rectangular seat-well, which would make things interesting. The old
seat well was ergonomically shaped, so you could at least still sit, paddle and pedal - although not
comfortably. I'm just playing devil's advocate here, I'd still have a go at retro-fitting one to my boat!
As has been mentioned before, the high seat, along with the higher COG of the hull may make it
tricky to take the new A.I. out in kayak-mode. The greater freeboard and therefore windage may
also work against the boat in kayak mode.
4: The rear-well, just like the one on the Revolution - which was one of the few things I disliked about my Revo.
The 'ski-jump' rear caused me to loose a few fix and other bits and pieces off the back of the boat. The one
on the 'old' A.I. was just about perfect.
5: The centreboard - just one more gadget to go wrong/require maintenance.
The simplicity of the old dagger-board was genius.
6: The look of the front-end - ugly

These are just my opinions, I've never seen or sat in a new A.I., so my views may be way-off. So there's
no need for anyone to blow a gasket over them.
Cheers,
Mike.