In my case it made me a bit angry when I was told the Spyder was stable. That it was my riding style that made the Spyder feel twitchy.
No doubt that was most of the problem......as it was in my case.
In a previous post, I noted that there are several riding techniques and skills that need to be "refreshed" to help get over the unstable feeling as much as possible.
Get over that "death grip" on the bars. This one is most often mentioned but the others aren't.
Keep your head UP and look DOWN the road.....not at the pavement right in front and not at the lines or curbs.
Regardless of what you ride, the machine will GO where you are LOOKING.
This is sometimes called "target fixation".
On curves, this means NOT looking at the shoulders but looking through the curve at where you want to go.
Once you get more than a few hours in the seat, your body will MAKE it go where you are looking.......smoothly.
And that includes off the road in the ditch.......if you are looking there. :yikes:
Lastly, don't anticipate curves. Consciously turning too soon is what scares the crap out of many new riders.
Once you get relatively comfortable on the machine, let it "roll" into a curve and don't consciously try to make it turn.
You should find that most of the turning happens more or less automatically and not a lot of effort is required.
And lastly, I don't remember seeing much of anybody mention LEANING.
If you don't get into the habit of leaning into a turn, a 3-wheeled machine will try to "throw" you off to the outside, especially if there is a bump involved in the middle of the turn. This can cause a sudden unwanted steering input that you blame on the machine when it really is the rider.
I KNOW all of those things; knew them for a LONG time and even on 2 wheels still had to consciously practice them regularly.
I am doing the same thing on the Spyder......all the time at first.
It has helped a LOT.
But it has not completely eliminated the feeling that it is trying to veer into the ditch when an unexpected pavement wave or a strong gust of wind hits.
There are a LOT of factors that enter into this.
Just don't try and tell me that there IS NO PROBLEM. :thumbup:
There is no waggle problem,