I am not willing to wait for proof which will never come. There can be no proof for the first seven fires because no investigations were conducted, and in my case the damage was so complete there was nothing left to inspect. I must make prudent decisions based on the best information now available. I have always said we will never know for certain what caused my fire. I am willing to leave that in the past. Now, I must do what I can to improve the chances that Spyder#2 will not suffer the same fate. Some call it speculation, but I call it making a prudent decision based on imperfect information. We do this all the time in all areas of our life.
Removing the canister is prudent. It cannot void the warranty in unrelated areas and it is easily reversed. I have had a lot of motorcycles and none, other than the Spyder, has ever had a canister. I am totally comfortable with removing the canister. As far as I am concerned it is the #1 suspect. I would like to know what BRP thinks, but I don't expect to ever find out.
We know so much more now than we did when my fire occurred. Nevertheless, we should not wait for perfect information before we do anything.
Well stated! :agree:
We can either live our lives based on the 10~12 thousand fire free Spyders out there or we can wring our hands and live based on the 5~7 fires.
I like plan 1 and I see that is your choice as well.
Everyone seems to think we should be guaranteed an accident free, problem free, fire free existence while relying on an outside agent to provide this. Whether it be government, product manufacturer or whatever.
What happened to the American spirit of taking care of things ourselves?
Your approach is commendable. Taking the canister off has no downside and 100% upside. It is easy to do, doesn't cost anything, and can be returned to original configuration just as easily and cost free.
The worst that this modification can do is nothing at all, other than upset an environmentalist or 2 (well maybe all of them). And it has the potential to make the Spyder run better and maybe even reduce the possibility of fire.
To me this is found in the dictionary under "No Brainer"
My feeling is that BRP really does not know for sure what has caused these fires. But like us, they probably have their suspicions. And I think they are addressing these within the requirements of the law and sound legal counsel.
I also think BRP would love to jetison the evap tank if they could. But they can't and they can't even suggest that we do it. Has noting to do with warrany, engine longevity or anything else except EPA law.
The evap tank is a production of environmentalists and trial lawyers, not power plant engineers (ok they designed it but you know what I mean).
I understand and completely agree that we need to hold BRP responsible for imperfections in the Spyder. But we didn't get to be the greatest nation in the world by waiting for someone else to take care of things we can fix ourselves.
I commend you for your thoughtful, reasoned approach.
Enjoy what you have or fix it so you can enjoy what you have.