Pennyrick
New member
My RT has been in the dealer's hands for about three weeks now waiting on parts from Canada. It went in for the 28,000 mile service but I had four specific complaints that also needed to be addressed and three of those four required parts to fix them (all under warranty thank goodness) and the third was simple.
I had complained about a noise that sounded like a speedometer cable that needed lubrication but since the Spyder is fly by wire, there are no cables. Turned out it was leaves. Somehow leaves had come in under the tupperware on the left side and once air began to flow over and around them, the noise began.
So that got fixed and the other items are being worked on as I write this. One of the parts we were waiting (boots) had to be manufactured so that was the source of the delay.
While visiting my Spyder in intensive care the tech pointed out where the belt had trapped a good sized rock in the sprocket and it was lodged there. He managed to pry the rock out and the sprocket seems okay but the belt has three teeth that are worn on one side. His advice (since there is no belt in stock and we want to leave on a trip later this month) is to leave it for the next service interval and then replace the belt. He is comfortable that it will stand up for a few more thousand miles. I trust him so I am going to wait until then.
I should be back on the road just in time to get the full brunt of Georgia's pine pollen in my eyes and nose later this week.
I had complained about a noise that sounded like a speedometer cable that needed lubrication but since the Spyder is fly by wire, there are no cables. Turned out it was leaves. Somehow leaves had come in under the tupperware on the left side and once air began to flow over and around them, the noise began.
So that got fixed and the other items are being worked on as I write this. One of the parts we were waiting (boots) had to be manufactured so that was the source of the delay.
While visiting my Spyder in intensive care the tech pointed out where the belt had trapped a good sized rock in the sprocket and it was lodged there. He managed to pry the rock out and the sprocket seems okay but the belt has three teeth that are worn on one side. His advice (since there is no belt in stock and we want to leave on a trip later this month) is to leave it for the next service interval and then replace the belt. He is comfortable that it will stand up for a few more thousand miles. I trust him so I am going to wait until then.
I should be back on the road just in time to get the full brunt of Georgia's pine pollen in my eyes and nose later this week.