Tom in NM
New member
"sounds" right
The sound does make a difference - my Spyder has much less vibration than any other bike I have rode. I found without the engine/transmission sound (helmet and iPod ear-canal buds), I could not tell when to shift until the RPMs got very high. If I was watching traffic, I could be in 2nd entering the expressway.
Without the cue from the sound of the engine, I was really pushing the RPMs up. The vibrations were not enough for my brain (based on previous riding experience) to translate that into a "shift" signal to my hand.
Tom
The thing with 35mph is that you don't have the wind to carry the sound away and you hear the engine sounding real busy in 3rd while it seems relaxed in 4th.
I'm use to the two wheel versions of bikes and I'm so use to "listening" to the bike to tell me when.
The sound does make a difference - my Spyder has much less vibration than any other bike I have rode. I found without the engine/transmission sound (helmet and iPod ear-canal buds), I could not tell when to shift until the RPMs got very high. If I was watching traffic, I could be in 2nd entering the expressway.
Without the cue from the sound of the engine, I was really pushing the RPMs up. The vibrations were not enough for my brain (based on previous riding experience) to translate that into a "shift" signal to my hand.
Tom