Fatcycledaddy
Active member
Because of the Spyder's great range, I no longer obsess about how much fuel is left. On my Indian Scout there were always two Givi fuel containers in the left saddlebag, adding 1.3 gallons of fuel to the meager 3.3 gallons of the tank. There are stretches in Eastern Oregon where you pass a sign that says 125 miles to next fuel, after you are 40 miles past the last station. I couldn't make that ride without the extra fuel and there are other rides I like where a closed station can make the loop longer than the bikes range. And so I don't alarm Peter, I always added the fuel as soon as there was room in the tank. No worries now, with the Spyder's long legs. You do learn to buy fuel whenever it's available. Fuel availability and range are coupled, more in some parts of the country than others.
You are exactly correct, same here.
I never try of plan on running low on fuel, and I have never ran the either Spyder out of fuel, but there are places out west where that does occasionally happen, you have 125 or more miles to the next station, and that is after you have ridden a ways already.
Then there are the times in Wyoming where you run into the winds blowing so hard that you only get 25 MPG towing the camper, you thought you would get to the next station with over 1/4 of a tank, and end up running on empty by the time you get there.
Knowing how much farther I can go in those situations is a great benefit.
The point was missed that it is not about pushing it as far as you can and running low, that is stupidity!
I carried extra fuel in the Yamaha Venture every time we went west, its range was much less.
With the mileage and tank size of the 2015 Spyder, it only happened to me twice that I was very close to running out in the 50,000 or so miles we put on it, and those were the two scenarios just mentioned.