IWN2RYD
New member
Simple and short.... 2010 RT-S SE5 One up and two up ryding....
Husband- 6'2" 225lbs ish likes more spirited type ryding....
There you go... Keep in mind our driving area for this was from Enumclaw Washington to Seattle and about half way back. This included an AVG speed of about 41mph and a lot of curvy/hilly roads with about 10 miles on I-5. Anyway... our $.02
Husband- 6'2" 225lbs ish likes more spirited type ryding....
- The steering responds faster. Or what I will call "Micro". I experienced more car like steering abilities and that is a welcomed feel for me
- What I will "Lag" in the very beginning of the steering is almost gone
- fast left to right steering is closer to what I would call normal in responsiveness
- We live in a rainy area, so the roads all have "Crowns" in the middle. I used to always feel a need to push to the left more than I thought I should in order to keep the bike on the road where I wanted it. Now the steering responds more like a car (Easier to keep in my lane where I want it) and I am not using as much effort to keep it straight
- Big rigs had been a bit uneasy for me to deal with when the wind would start hitting the bike. Now the bike is more stable do to the steering being "Micro" controllable now vs more of a manhandling type steering before
- No change in the dead stop turning. Still needs the bike to be moving in order to not have to "Manhandle" it
- Major win for me.... To get to our home we have to come off a very busy street with a 40mph speed limit, down hill, turning right onto a street needing to do about 8-10mph to do it safely in most weather. Our bike would always fight us as far as steering onto this street to the point of always, with out fail, put us into granny and end up in the center yellow line. It did not matter how we took the turn. Now that same turn no longer has the "Stiffness" that the steering once had. I though it was because of the center of gravity moving so far forward forcing the transfer of the weight to go all to the left front tire resulting in a stress to the power-steering unit. We figured it was normal for this bike and simply needed to be aware of this for safe ryding. Well that is now gone. We can go into and out of that turn like a normal two wheeled bike does. This was the single most noticeable improvement we found. The rest are more of a nit-picky but welcomed experience.
- Less fatigue allowing for longer more enjoyable ryding
- "Felt" easier to steer
- driving experience is now more like she "Thought" it would be like when we first purchased the bike
- Not much else of a difference
There you go... Keep in mind our driving area for this was from Enumclaw Washington to Seattle and about half way back. This included an AVG speed of about 41mph and a lot of curvy/hilly roads with about 10 miles on I-5. Anyway... our $.02