600 mile service
When I bought my Spyder, the nearest dealer was 700 miles. By the time I needed my first service, there was a dealer in Kansas City,250 miles away. I contacted them twice and asked about their ability to properly service the spyder and was assured they were qualified, so I made an appointment for service. To my dismay, they not know the proper procedure for changing the oil, and when challanged, they offered to do it over-this time by the manual.
My suggestion (as I did) is to ask to speak to the person that will do the service, and ask several questions (that you know the answers to) such as the CORRECT procedure for the oil change, how much oil does the bike require, what is the proper belt tension and how is it determined, and what the tire pressures should be for the average rider.
There are now 3 "Dealers" within 100 miles, and by asking these questions, I found only 1 Tech that could answer these simple questions. The fact that they have a Dealer License does NOT mean they have thorough knowledge of this bike. The Service Manuals are expensive, but the information you need is there.
I have 14,500 almost trouble free miles on mine in 1 year. I replaced the rear tire @ 12,000 and the gear position sensor. That's it. Good Luck and "Don't ride faster than your Angel can fly"
When I bought my Spyder, the nearest dealer was 700 miles. By the time I needed my first service, there was a dealer in Kansas City,250 miles away. I contacted them twice and asked about their ability to properly service the spyder and was assured they were qualified, so I made an appointment for service. To my dismay, they not know the proper procedure for changing the oil, and when challanged, they offered to do it over-this time by the manual.
My suggestion (as I did) is to ask to speak to the person that will do the service, and ask several questions (that you know the answers to) such as the CORRECT procedure for the oil change, how much oil does the bike require, what is the proper belt tension and how is it determined, and what the tire pressures should be for the average rider.
There are now 3 "Dealers" within 100 miles, and by asking these questions, I found only 1 Tech that could answer these simple questions. The fact that they have a Dealer License does NOT mean they have thorough knowledge of this bike. The Service Manuals are expensive, but the information you need is there.
I have 14,500 almost trouble free miles on mine in 1 year. I replaced the rear tire @ 12,000 and the gear position sensor. That's it. Good Luck and "Don't ride faster than your Angel can fly"