Cool, wish somewhere more local to me carried the brand. It sucks that setup out of the factory is a gamble and you had a couple of issues with your particular guitar, but at least they're fixed and now you get to enjoy playing the thing.
I got lucky with mine - no issues with any of the hardware/electronics, just had to adjust the action a little and then it was good to go. Honestly even if I had to do more setup I'd still be happy with the purchase; it's an astonishing amount of guitar for the money.
I can see why some people might find the colors too bright, but I'm with you - I love all 3 of the finishes (though I wanted the Daytona Yellow as my first choice) and really dig how they look on the body and on the painted headstock. Crazy eye-catching finishes, everything about the looks is super appealing to me.
And yup, that's the video that sold me on the guitar! Tom Quayle's a beast. Reading about how all Vintage's models play and sound like much more expensive guitars for a fraction for the price has me jealous of the folks in the UK. Though I think it'd be extremely dangerous on my wallet if they were more readily available here in the States, hehe. Don't have a Les Paul style guitar yet so I'm kinda eyeing that gold-top V100, hmmm...
I really think Vintage would make a killing if they had better marketing/distribution outside of their home country, but it's also kind of neat having an instrument from a brand that's basically unknown in the US. Gives me a lot to talk about when people see the instrument.