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New York Times Article on Trikes.

If I was 20 years younger I certainly would NOT be on three wheels. just saying I started off with a 100 cc Yamaha back in the mid sisties, had a 305 Honda dream, a 350 Jawa , a 650 Triumph , a 750 Magna, A 883 Sportster, 1100 Honda ACE, 1500 Kawi Nomad. and now at 63 I am on A Spyder. To me it was the wise choice at my age.
 
I'm 33 and healthy. I chose a Spyder. I'm also a geek, into new things, and had a father pass in a motorcycle accident, so I wanted something safer.
 
The one thing that does surprize me a little when you read the posts after the article is the way the 2 wheelers just hate trikes and the people that ride them? I just don't get it what's the big deal FFS?:dontknow: Their real passionate about it I will give them that much.
 
There were only a few reader comments when I read the article the first time. Now, there are many more. Most of the comments are rude and mean spirited. :mad:
 
Buy it again

There were only a few reader comments when I read the article the first time. Now, there are many more. Most of the comments are rude and mean spirited. :mad:
If I were 20 something, again I would buy a Spyder as well. (I don't think I would get a traditional trike though) I always want something a little different from the majority and I like the style, visibility and comfort of not having to put my feet down. I rode 'Wings back in the day and my buddy described them as "Low-Speed High-Drag" (compared to his Ninja). But I always had a faring, music and a sound track to my ride. He had poor posture and the skin on his face stretched back from acceleration!

The Spyder's safety is a factor NOW (couldn't walk for 6 months in my 20s due to a cycle accident, and there's a lesson you don't forget) but geezerdom aside, I would have one at any age. I like being different and getting the bit of extra attention. Anyone can ride a 'same ole same ole Harley'... but it takes a little rebellion and self confidence to ride something really unique.
 
"Anyone can ride a 'same ole same ole Harley'... but it takes a little rebellion and self confidence to ride something really unique."

:thumbup: :clap: :agree:
 
There were only a few reader comments when I read the article the first time. Now, there are many more. Most of the comments are rude and mean spirited. :mad:

They think that they are the only ones who can ride motorcycles and if you don't have two wheels, you're inferior. Well, the way I feel is - a Spyder is not a motorcycle. It is a Roadster, and a unique vehicle. We are priviliged to be able to own these Roadsters, and can go as fast, if not faster than they can. If you were at Lamont's barbeque, you saw an age spread from the late 20's to the 80's (sorry Forrest!).

I'm proud of our Spyders, they bring a lot of fun and adventure into our lives, the people who ride them are amazing, and we wouldn't have anything else!

:thumbup:
 
They think that they are the only ones who can ride motorcycles and if you don't have two wheels, you're inferior. Well, the way I feel is - a Spyder is not a motorcycle. It is a Roadster, and a unique vehicle. We are priviliged to be able to own these Roadsters, and can go as fast, if not faster than they can. If you were at Lamont's barbeque, you saw an age spread from the late 20's to the 80's (sorry Forrest!).

I'm proud of our Spyders, they bring a lot of fun and adventure into our lives, the people who ride them are amazing, and we wouldn't have anything else!

:thumbup:

:thumbup::thumbup::thumbup::thumbup: I was terrified to take my MSF course at 62. I'm proud that I passed it. I certainly dont have the experience as many of the posters seem to have. BUT....it seems I have more tolerance and appreciation for cycling than they.
 
"Anyone can ride a 'same ole same ole Harley'... but it takes a little rebellion and self confidence to ride something really unique."

:thumbup: :clap: :agree:

I tend to agree. The other interesting piece of data I was told by my Harley dealer is that the median age of new Tri-Glide sales ia 46. So it ain't just old folks buying three wheelers.

Carl
 
I'm getting really tired of these purists

As a Bowhunter; I see it there also! :gaah:

The only TRUE Bowhunters use longbows and wooden arrows with feather fletching...
Compound Bows have "Training wheels" (sound familiar??:shocked:)
I won't even begin to mention what is said about crossbows...

Snobbery exists everywhere... :sour:
 
I started riding in 1961 with Triumph Bonneville's. Since then I have ridden many dozens of bikes and owned well over a dozen myself. Some I owned were iconic - Norton Commando, '73 Kawasaki Z900, etc. Many were were cruisers, other crotch rockets. All in all each had it's strengths and weakness. In fact, all were criticized by some reporter somewhere. Some pundits who claimed to know why people did this or that liberally lent their opinions to print (no internet then). Now many of those bikes are "classics" sought out by collectors. In fact I still ride an '86 Honda V65!

My point is this - the pundits can't see the future. In fact they want to sell their articles so they have to find fault so someone somewhere will read them. It is rare to find pundits that are objective and impartial. The more controversy the more money they make. You know what you want in a machine and that is what you should focus on. Soon, you'll find that the Spyder is common place and copied by many.

In all the motorcycles I have owned, the Spyder stands head and shoulders above the others. It accomplishes everything I want in this type machine. I would not trade it for any production motorcycle on the market today. I can say without fear of contradiction, that my decision to buy had nothing to do with my age or infirmity but strictly with the type of riding I do. I want to travel long distances and carry a lot of gear and this machines does that well.

Stay the course and ignore the others! You are the ones breaking the molds and leading motorcycles into the future.
 
Mr Looney

New-Bee on the ROCK

I hear what your guys and gals are saying about safety..
I am in China and you thing some places in USA are bad, thats a cake walk compared to here..
I like all the safety features built into the :spyder2:

I have only known about this machine a few weeks now and really like what I see...... Hope go get on in the next year... But first must do my research and with a little help from you experienced riders maybe I can get a good one!!
 
New-Bee on the ROCK

I hear what your guys and gals are saying about safety..
I am in China and you thing some places in USA are bad, thats a cake walk compared to here..
I like all the safety features built into the :spyder2:

I have only known about this machine a few weeks now and really like what I see...... Hope go get on in the next year... But first must do my research and with a little help from you experienced riders maybe I can get a good one!!

:welcome:
 
It's an offensive and idiotic article that shows the bias and ignorance of the author. I have NEVER had anyone come up to me on my Spyder and suggest it was a geriatric trike. They see high tech and cool and the Spyder's movie roles support it. On the other hand I've seen several recent comedies with old guys on Harleys. Maybe that's what they're pissed about. Lol
 
I started riding in 1961 with Triumph Bonneville's. Since then I have ridden many dozens of bikes and owned well over a dozen myself. Some I owned were iconic - Norton Commando, '73 Kawasaki Z900, etc. Many were were cruisers, other crotch rockets. All in all each had it's strengths and weakness. In fact, all were criticized by some reporter somewhere. Some pundits who claimed to know why people did this or that liberally lent their opinions to print (no internet then). Now many of those bikes are "classics" sought out by collectors. In fact I still ride an '86 Honda V65!

My point is this - the pundits can't see the future. In fact they want to sell their articles so they have to find fault so someone somewhere will read them. It is rare to find pundits that are objective and impartial. The more controversy the more money they make. You know what you want in a machine and that is what you should focus on. Soon, you'll find that the Spyder is common place and copied by many.

In all the motorcycles I have owned, the Spyder stands head and shoulders above the others. It accomplishes everything I want in this type machine. I would not trade it for any production motorcycle on the market today. I can say without fear of contradiction, that my decision to buy had nothing to do with my age or infirmity but strictly with the type of riding I do. I want to travel long distances and carry a lot of gear and this machines does that well.

Stay the course and ignore the others! You are the ones breaking the molds and leading motorcycles into the future.
:clap: Well said!

BTW, I still own a 65 Bonneville.
 
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