ButterSmooth
New member
In 24,000+ miles I've learned about the characteristics/quirks of my RT's personality. One of the things I noted right from the beginning was the directional instability under hard braking. Accepting this as a characteristic of the vehicle and living with it this long may have been a mistake. The recent thread on alignment, suspension geometry and resultant bump steer has made me reconsider this as a 'normal' behavior.
I used to practice 'emergency stops' on all previous motorcycles. The Spyder's instability makes this an unwise practice, so I no longer rehearse for emergency braking. I can usually contain the path to one lane, but it is unpredictable and road irregularities can make directional control worse.
With 20,000+ miles on the current front tires there is no irregular wear, cupping or other indications of alignment or suspension issues. And, it has shot off line under heavy braking from the start. Nominal front inflation is 19.5psi.
What should I be looking at? Anybody else notice the issue?
I used to practice 'emergency stops' on all previous motorcycles. The Spyder's instability makes this an unwise practice, so I no longer rehearse for emergency braking. I can usually contain the path to one lane, but it is unpredictable and road irregularities can make directional control worse.
With 20,000+ miles on the current front tires there is no irregular wear, cupping or other indications of alignment or suspension issues. And, it has shot off line under heavy braking from the start. Nominal front inflation is 19.5psi.
What should I be looking at? Anybody else notice the issue?
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