OutofSpecReviews
Out of Spec Reviews: detailed EV testing for serious enthusiasts and informed buyers
Out of Spec Reviews is one of the best-known specialist EV review channels in the English-speaking YouTube space. It is part of the wider Out of Spec Studios ecosystem, which also includes channels such as Out of Spec Motoring, Out of Spec Testing, Out of Spec Dave, Out of Spec Podcast, and Out of Spec Detailing. The main Out of Spec Reviews channel focuses on car reviews, EV testing, charging, and related electric-vehicle topics, while the wider network separates road trips, repeatable testing, ownership content, news discussion, interviews, and other specialist formats into different channels.
The channel is closely associated with Kyle Conner, who is the central presenter and founder of Out of Spec Studios, but it should not be understood as a Kyle-only channel. The wider Out of Spec team includes several recurring presenters and contributors across the network, including Francie Saunders, Jordan Coleton, Coleton Clegg, Dave Conner, and others, depending on the channel and format. This gives the Out of Spec ecosystem more range than a single-presenter EV review channel: Kyle often leads the deepest charging and driving analysis, while other presenters bring different ownership experiences, news coverage, interviews, road trips, and more accessible discussion formats.
Out of Spec Reviews is best suited to viewers who want more depth than a normal car review provides. It is especially useful for EV enthusiasts, experienced EV owners, charging-focused viewers, and serious buyers who want to understand how an electric car performs beyond the brochure figures. The channel often looks at range, charging speed, charging curves, battery preconditioning, highway efficiency, software behavior, route planning, towing, road-trip practicality, and the way different EVs behave under demanding conditions.
A major strength of the Out of Spec ecosystem is its real-world testing culture. The content often goes far beyond a short press-drive impression. Vehicles are taken on road trips, fast-charged repeatedly, compared against rivals, driven in difficult conditions, and evaluated for how they behave when used hard. Out of Spec Testing, a related channel, is used for more repeatable EV tests and challenges. This broader testing structure gives the main review channel more credibility because the conclusions often come from extensive hands-on experience rather than limited launch-event driving.
Another strength is access. Out of Spec Reviews often gets early access to important EVs, including prototypes and pre-production cars, which allows the channel to show viewers how upcoming models behave before they reach normal customers. A good example is its early coverage of the electric Porsche Cayenne prototype, including highway range impressions and first-drive content. This kind of access makes the channel useful not only for shoppers comparing cars already on sale, but also for enthusiasts and early adopters following the next generation of EVs.
Charging coverage is one of the channel’s defining areas. Out of Spec Reviews frequently discusses DC fast charging, charging curves, charger reliability, plug-and-charge behavior, route planning, charging-network differences, and how individual vehicles manage battery temperature and charging performance. For viewers who care about long-distance EV travel, this is one of the channel’s most valuable qualities. It helps explain why two EVs with similar battery sizes or official range ratings can feel very different in real ownership.
The geek level is high compared with mainstream car channels. Out of Spec Reviews often goes into the details of battery capacity, state of charge, thermal behavior, charging strategy, energy consumption, vehicle software, infrastructure, and real-world efficiency. It is not usually an engineering teardown channel focused on battery chemistry or component-level diagnostics, but it is much more technical and data-aware than ordinary buyer-review content. New EV buyers can still learn a lot from it, but some videos may feel long or detailed for viewers who only want a simple recommendation.
The channel’s EV stance is clearly EV-positive, but it is also highly critical when products or infrastructure fail to perform well. Kyle and the wider Out of Spec team generally treat EVs as exciting, capable, and central to the future of transportation, but they are not soft on weak charging performance, poor software, bad route planning, inefficient drivetrains, unreliable public chargers, or disappointing real-world range. This gives the channel a pragmatic enthusiast tone: strongly interested in EVs, but willing to expose their weaknesses.
Out of Spec Reviews is mainly an EV channel, although the broader Out of Spec universe can touch on other automotive topics. The channel’s core identity is electric vehicles, charging, road trips, and EV ownership. It is not a traditional petrolhead channel built around engine sound, classic cars, motorsport nostalgia, or combustion-engine performance. Even when performance is discussed, the focus usually returns to EV-specific questions such as power delivery, battery management, efficiency, repeatability, and charging recovery.
The presentation style is energetic, detailed, and enthusiast-led. Kyle’s style is highly knowledgeable and often fast-moving, with a lot of spontaneous technical commentary. Other Out of Spec presenters bring different tones, from more conversational podcast-style discussion to road-trip reporting and ownership-focused impressions. This variety helps the wider Out of Spec network cover both deep technical analysis and more approachable EV education.
Production quality is strong, but the appeal is not mainly cinematic polish. The videos are generally well shot and professional, but Out of Spec’s value comes more from access, experience, testing ambition, and technical enthusiasm than from studio-style presentation. Long videos, road-trip footage, charging stops, live reactions, and detailed discussions are part of the channel’s character.
The wider Out of Spec Studios structure is important to understand. Out of Spec Reviews is only one part of a larger media ecosystem. Out of Spec Motoring focuses more on EV road trips and what long-distance electric travel is really like. Out of Spec Testing is used for more repeatable EV tests and challenges. Out of Spec Podcast adds news discussion, interviews, and broader industry conversation. This separation makes the overall platform useful for different types of viewers: casual review watchers, road-trip fans, data-focused testers, podcast listeners, and owners looking for practical EV experience.
The main limitation is that the content can be long, detailed, and enthusiast-heavy. Viewers who want short, simple, highly edited buyer advice may prefer a more mainstream automotive channel. Out of Spec Reviews is also strongest for the North American EV market, charging networks, and vehicles available in that region, although many of its charging and efficiency insights are relevant internationally.
Overall, Out of Spec Reviews is one of the most important EV-focused YouTube channels for viewers who want to understand how electric cars really perform beyond official specifications. It is especially strong on charging behavior, road-trip usability, efficiency, software, early-access EV coverage, and real-world testing. It is not the simplest or shortest EV channel, but for serious EV shoppers, experienced owners, and technical enthusiasts, it offers a level of depth and practical experience that few mainstream car-review channels can match.
Latest reviews
Tesla Just Gave A Huge Middle Finger To Their New Customers! Removing Basic Autopilot Lane Centering
jan. 24, 2026
How To Prepare Your EV For This Winter Storm Coming Across America
jan. 23, 2026
Volvo Crushed It! My EX60 First Look & Full Tour - Interior + Exterior, Software, Performance & More
jan. 21, 2026
Denvix Showcases Latest Battery Banks & Mobile Tire Inflators At CES 2026!
jan. 21, 2026
Mercedes Launches Tesla FSD Competitor! San Fran City Drive Using MB. Drive Assist Pro w/ NVIDIA
jan. 17, 2026
Texas Instruments Supports 48V, Centralized Compute, ADAS & More! CES 2026 Booth Tour
jan. 16, 2026
CES 2026! Full Tour Of EV & Charging Advancements
jan. 11, 2026
My Thoughts On IONNA DC Fast Charging Network Into 2026
jan. 01, 2026
First Cross Country Autonomous Drive Completed! Over 10,000 Miles Using Tesla FSD w/ No Intervention
dec. 31, 2025
I Bought 3 Freewire DC Fast Chargers For $2,000!
dec. 30, 2025
This Is What’s Happening to Gas Stations In The Electric Car Capital! The Rise Of Energy Stations
dec. 29, 2025
Tesla Model X In 2025: It's Time To Move On
dec. 27, 2025
Delivery Day For Our FSD Test Car! We Needed A HW4 Tesla & My Buddy Wanted An EV - Perfect Solution
dec. 25, 2025
My Rivian “FSD” Test Ride! Long Road Ahead But The Correct Choice
dec. 13, 2025
This Is A Rivian On 2 Wheels! My ALSO First Ride
dec. 11, 2025
Lucid Gravity 5,000 Mile Review! The Best Driving SUV Crippled By Software Annoyances
dec. 09, 2025
We’ve Had The Volkswagen ID. Buzz For 5,000 Miles! Here’s What We Love & Hate
dec. 08, 2025
Lucid Gravity First Tow! Surprisingly Great Maxing Out This New Electric SUV
dec. 07, 2025
BMW's New Software Full Tour! iDrive X Interview w/ The Engineer Who Designed It
dec. 05, 2025
I Drive The BMW iX3 For The First Time! Deep Dive Nerd Details On The First Neue Klasse
dec. 03, 2025
I've Had My Rivian R1S For 6 Months & 15,000 Miles! My Dream Car Keeps Getting Better
dec. 01, 2025
What’s The Best EV For Rideshare? Your Electric Car Questions Answered!
nov. 30, 2025
Beware! Rivian Can Run Out Of Charge Above 0% - LFP Battery Calibration Issue & How To Fix
nov. 28, 2025
My First Tesla V4 Supercharger Experience! 1MW+ High Voltage Cabinet Shared Across 8 Stalls
nov. 26, 2025