Like the Adidas RBZ bat Adidas released to the public last year the Aero Burner is using a TaylorMade club line name (which is also owned by Adidas) to brand the bat---lessons from the tee-box to the batter's box, if you will. While that tidbit of information doesn't quite amount to a full on "Adidas Aero Burner Baseball Bat Review", it does get us on the right track, at least, and as new information arises. We will update this page as we get our hands on the bat as well as get reports from players using it.
Models Overview
We've also confirmed the intent is for the Adidas Aero Burner bat to be released in the "summertime" of 2016.
(You can see the Adidas RBZ X3 & EQT X1 reviews here).
Comparable Bats
The Adidas EQT X1 bat wasn't produced in a senior league, big barrel or youth space and we have no news if Adidas plans on getting into that market with the Aero Burner. But with BPF 1.15 standards changing to the USABats standard in January of 2018, we think it very unlikely Adidas will produce a bat for younger players which will be legal for only a year.
You can see the bat in action when Miami is up to bat in this video.
The Adidas EQT X1 wasn't particularly well-received, at least among non-collegiate players with school obligatory contracts. This isn't to say the X1 wasn't a good bat, as we discuss in our review, but the uptake in a seriously saturated market dominated by Easton, DeMarini, Slugger, and Rawlings will take more than a single piece aluminum bat to break through the rank and file of American baseball branding.