Heading east person jumped into my lane. Three wheels don't swerve as quick and clipped the the rear. I'm lucky to be in one piece no broken bones or anything major.
Sorry to hear about your accident. Make sure that the frame is not damaged. About the ability to quickly swerve on a Spyder, your front shocks must be set at the stiffer position and/or upgrade your sway bar.Heading east person jumped into my lane. Three wheels don't swerve as quick and clipped the the rear. I'm lucky to be in one piece no broken bones or anything major.
:agree: The low-light conditions always seem to bite us on the bottom... THAT'S why I'm tyring to talk the Missus into letting me light mine up so that it can be seen from orbit... I want to blind the cages so that they juist want to get out of my way.Glad that you are ok ,
:agree:Too many lights or too bright will just tend to blind or irritate or confuse oncoming drivers/riders.The importance of more lights/brighter lights is relative to each individual. I have never added any additional or brighter lights on any motorcycle I have owned in over 40 years. The disregard for safety of either the car driver or the motorcycle rider will cause an accident, no matter what. We should all ride with caution, avoid blind spots, excessive speed in traffic, forget the 2 second rule (give the car all the room it wants...it's a no-win situation if you don't), loud mufflers will irritate car drivers more than it will protect you (to them all you are is noise), all the rules written about safe riding will not save you if you don't drive with common sense. I know many will not agree with me, but that's the rules I have lived by and survived since 1966.