Just help me clarify this a bit in my own mind
@PeterKelly... If you are able to shut down the Spyder engine, leave it for a bit, and then successfully re-start the engine (with your foot firmly on the brake pedal), then surely, no matter what the dash says, your gearbox hasta be in Neutral.
I say this, cos unless BRP has changed the way things work on the 2020+ Spyders, that's the way these SE Semi-Auto Transmissions work. Even if you stop the Spyder while it's still in gear (which is not the greatest idea, cos it can confuse the dash/computers and the next time you start up, the dash can still be left showing that you're still in gear when you really aren't!

) Effectively, one of the very first things the computer controlled gear selector does upon starting the engine is to ensure the Transmission is in Neutral - so if your engine has been stopped, and you've started it up again without careering off down the road, chances are that you're not
actually still in gear, even if the dash does still show a gear number instead of '
N'; and your Spyder shouldn't move without you actually selecting 1st gear. Plus, regardless of it being in gear or not when you stop, if you don't set the Park Brake on shutting the engine down (the Warning beeper will only beeping beep for 30 seconds or so...

) once the engine is stopped and there's nothing providing oil pressure to the oil pressure operated Hydraulic Clutch (SE6's) or spinning the Centrifugal Clutch (SE5's) so your Spyder should roll freely, albeit with a bit of effort, cos these Spyders are heavy things, simply because the clutch isn't connecting the engine to the drive wheel.
So, can you confirm that your Spyder actually
IS shutting down and starting up again fine
without trying to immediately move upon you spinning the starter?? If that's the case, then it's not actually 'Stuck in gear', and whatever you're doing after starting the engine that gets it moving
IS actually selecting a gear. So in that case, the switch and the gear selector mechanism (at least between 1st & N) would seem to be working, altho possibly only between 1st & N, and vice versa. But if your Spyder
does try to start moving immediately the engine starts, then you've likely got a bigger problem...
Confirming any of that might not help you much right now, but it should help narrow down the potential problems for diagnosis a little, cos if the LH flappy paddle Switch is letting you select 1st in order for you to start your Spyder moving, and only then are you not able to change up/into N any more, it
shouldn't be the Switch itself that's the fault... those LH Control Modules that are the entire LH Handgrip assembly are expensive and apparently in short supply!
