NancysToy
Motorbike Professor
I think Dltang ruined me. :joke: Last year she made a comment that we had done little to modify Nancy's Spyder. Now I seem to have gotten carried away. We just underwent another round...although partly for good reason this time. Here are the lastest additions, and my thoughts:
1. BRP GIVI bags. I mentioned these before, but have some time on them now. I also had a chance to compare ours to BRPJunkie's GIVI setup. His sits a little higher and the turn signals are closer together (even more than stock) and mounted in the rear fender. He cleaned up the standard installation and they look nice. I am really getting used to the way the BRP mounts look, with their turn signal extensions. I like where the signals are up high, and they are wider spaced than stock. Very visible! Although we don't seem to take off the rack, it is a slick setup, and the Spyder looks more sporty again in a jiffy. Very sturdy, well-engineered brackets.
The GIVI bags are splendid, and BRP added a reflector strip on the back, that the standard GIVI bags do not have. Please note that the plastic lens is not a reflector! If you have anything other than the BRP version, you will need something additional to make it more visible, and I highly recommend that approach. I would love to have one of the NMN Genesis light kits for the GIVI, but ran into some snags. Don't want to run them plain because I think the outer lights should also be brake lights (and turn signals?) I would like to retain the standard, amber signals, but being inboard of the outermost lights might be confusing. Magic Man's Triple Play kit combined with the Genesis kit can almost do all I wanted...but I am still unsure of the red signal lights that are necessary with the Triple Play conversion. I do like the visibility of the amber (Euro fashion). Twisted Throttle sells a ReflectGard Scotchlite kit to go behind the V35 lens to make it act as a reflector. I am considering it while I ponder the Triple Play and Genesis.
2. BRP Comfort Seat. The seat is pretty nice. Great detail! Not as hard as the Corbins I've owned. Not as wide as the Russells. It placed Nancy an inch or two higher and an inch or two back, just what her new knee needed. Unfortunately that made quite a reach to the bars, even with the BRP riser. More on that later. The seat was surprisingly comfortable to me, since I like the way the stock seat felt. (OK, so I'm odd!) I have yet to do a real long ride to test it long term. Probably won't be a cure-all...I get a sore behind just sitting at this cozy computer chair. The altered seating position made the shifter sit in a different spot than Nancy is used to. She says she will get used to it, but has to point her foot more to upshift now. I ride too many different bikes to have noticed it at all. The seat seems to provide better lateral support in the turns, either because it is firmer, or wider, or flatter, or all three. Between that and the new risers, this baby really corners well now!
3. NMN/ESI 3" Risers. The new riding position for Nancy necessitated additional risers. We had the BRP 1", so had to go with the 3" kit. No real struggles with installation...would have been easier if I just cut off the grips, but I am a cheap Dutchman. I had a struggle getting to the ties to extend the cables. I was unable to tilt the clutch cylinder as far forward as I would have liked. Nancy needed quite a bit of angle on the risers to reach them well. If I were doing it again I might have removed the BRP riser and used the 4" NMN/ESI. That would have given me the same position but less angle on the riser, so the clutch cylinder could have been more level. The new risers made the Comfort Seat less comfortable for me. I don't know why. The changed seating angle made it hit a slightly different part of my behind, I guess. Nancy is far more comfortable, though. That's what counts. :thumbup:
The difference in the steering is everything others here have said, and more! With a stock Spyder you pull on one bar in a turn, but can only twist slightly with the oppsite shoulder, and not really push. The risers allow bent arms...and pushing and pulling at the same time. They truly halve the steering effort. Much more control, no strain on the core muscles. They are everything they are cracked up to be. Even though she is much shorter, and still leans a bit, Nancy noticed the difference immediately. Gotta learn to ride this thing all over again now.
4. Coil Ground Wire. While I had the side pod off, I decided to add the coil frame ground wire. We have an SM5, so this was not a necessary item. I wanted to see if it would calm down our irregular idle problem. Besides, it made no sense to me that the coil frame was not properly gronded, since it is attached to the rubber mounted oil tank bracket. I experienced no changes from this mod. The Spyder is neitehr beter nor worse. I am happy, though.
Pictures are also in my album and My Mods section. Now, to hoard my meager, fixed income so I can afford to modify something else. Deb, you've created a monster! :joke:
-Scotty
1. BRP GIVI bags. I mentioned these before, but have some time on them now. I also had a chance to compare ours to BRPJunkie's GIVI setup. His sits a little higher and the turn signals are closer together (even more than stock) and mounted in the rear fender. He cleaned up the standard installation and they look nice. I am really getting used to the way the BRP mounts look, with their turn signal extensions. I like where the signals are up high, and they are wider spaced than stock. Very visible! Although we don't seem to take off the rack, it is a slick setup, and the Spyder looks more sporty again in a jiffy. Very sturdy, well-engineered brackets.
The GIVI bags are splendid, and BRP added a reflector strip on the back, that the standard GIVI bags do not have. Please note that the plastic lens is not a reflector! If you have anything other than the BRP version, you will need something additional to make it more visible, and I highly recommend that approach. I would love to have one of the NMN Genesis light kits for the GIVI, but ran into some snags. Don't want to run them plain because I think the outer lights should also be brake lights (and turn signals?) I would like to retain the standard, amber signals, but being inboard of the outermost lights might be confusing. Magic Man's Triple Play kit combined with the Genesis kit can almost do all I wanted...but I am still unsure of the red signal lights that are necessary with the Triple Play conversion. I do like the visibility of the amber (Euro fashion). Twisted Throttle sells a ReflectGard Scotchlite kit to go behind the V35 lens to make it act as a reflector. I am considering it while I ponder the Triple Play and Genesis.
2. BRP Comfort Seat. The seat is pretty nice. Great detail! Not as hard as the Corbins I've owned. Not as wide as the Russells. It placed Nancy an inch or two higher and an inch or two back, just what her new knee needed. Unfortunately that made quite a reach to the bars, even with the BRP riser. More on that later. The seat was surprisingly comfortable to me, since I like the way the stock seat felt. (OK, so I'm odd!) I have yet to do a real long ride to test it long term. Probably won't be a cure-all...I get a sore behind just sitting at this cozy computer chair. The altered seating position made the shifter sit in a different spot than Nancy is used to. She says she will get used to it, but has to point her foot more to upshift now. I ride too many different bikes to have noticed it at all. The seat seems to provide better lateral support in the turns, either because it is firmer, or wider, or flatter, or all three. Between that and the new risers, this baby really corners well now!
3. NMN/ESI 3" Risers. The new riding position for Nancy necessitated additional risers. We had the BRP 1", so had to go with the 3" kit. No real struggles with installation...would have been easier if I just cut off the grips, but I am a cheap Dutchman. I had a struggle getting to the ties to extend the cables. I was unable to tilt the clutch cylinder as far forward as I would have liked. Nancy needed quite a bit of angle on the risers to reach them well. If I were doing it again I might have removed the BRP riser and used the 4" NMN/ESI. That would have given me the same position but less angle on the riser, so the clutch cylinder could have been more level. The new risers made the Comfort Seat less comfortable for me. I don't know why. The changed seating angle made it hit a slightly different part of my behind, I guess. Nancy is far more comfortable, though. That's what counts. :thumbup:
The difference in the steering is everything others here have said, and more! With a stock Spyder you pull on one bar in a turn, but can only twist slightly with the oppsite shoulder, and not really push. The risers allow bent arms...and pushing and pulling at the same time. They truly halve the steering effort. Much more control, no strain on the core muscles. They are everything they are cracked up to be. Even though she is much shorter, and still leans a bit, Nancy noticed the difference immediately. Gotta learn to ride this thing all over again now.

4. Coil Ground Wire. While I had the side pod off, I decided to add the coil frame ground wire. We have an SM5, so this was not a necessary item. I wanted to see if it would calm down our irregular idle problem. Besides, it made no sense to me that the coil frame was not properly gronded, since it is attached to the rubber mounted oil tank bracket. I experienced no changes from this mod. The Spyder is neitehr beter nor worse. I am happy, though.

Pictures are also in my album and My Mods section. Now, to hoard my meager, fixed income so I can afford to modify something else. Deb, you've created a monster! :joke:
-Scotty

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