Only being a recent :spyder2: owner I am curious about the recent
recall for the steering- Were there a few incidents like these fires
or did BRP figure it out themselves?
I sent the below email to BRP.
----- Original Message ----- From: Jeff Kasubaski
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, August 04, 2009 5:17 PM
Subject: Spyder Fires
Hello,
I have been reading about Spyders catching on fire. I was just wondering what BRP is doing to address this major issue! I keep thinking someday my Spyder will burn up in a fire!
Your prompt response is appreciated. It would be nice if you would address this question on your website as a Question of the week.
Sincerely,
Jeff Kasubaski
For the spyders that have burnt,Did brp pay for the damages?Or did they make you file it under your insurance?:dontknow:
I don't think this should be an insurance thing,all spyders are still under the 2 yr warr.IMO I think brp should cover it!If they had to pay out they would find the answer!
:shemademe_smilie: :roflblack: Halon SystemI think a Halon system will be my next mod when I smell the Wintergreen I will now to Bail :joke:Seriously sum ting is wong I hope they move there :cus: on this one.They must be opening alot of Swiss Bank accounts :ani29:
they just said they were going to keep her and contact brp......
Now I am not trying to be cute or funny here... but the cause of these fires is excessive heat in the engine compartment. The source naturally is the engine itself and the main villains radiating the heat are the exhaust pipes in that small enclosed space. It doesn't really matter whether the fire is caused by melting insulation on a wire causing shorts or melted fuel and oil lines. The root causes are still the exhaust manifolds and hoses/wiring rubbing on or to too close to the hot stuff. The initial fuel sources are hoses and wiring insulation then when there is enough heat the the fuel source is gas and oil.
To resolve most of this problem you must
1. get the wires and hoses away from the extreme heat sources which are the heads, cylinders and exhaust manifolds... (see this thread) http://www.spyderlovers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=13060
2. increase air flow through the engine compartment... just a suggestion but several of us have removed the under body splash panels. Check out Lamonsters information on this one (see this thread)
http://www.spyderlovers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9781&highlight=bottom+splash+panels
3. keep the exhaust heat where it is supposed to be... "in the exhaust pipes"... by insulating the headers in the engine compartment. this heat is supposed to go out the back end of the pipe not through the walls of the pipe. (There are several threads on this subject... just do a search on wrapping exhaust pipe or exhaust wrap)
I know there are a couple of other points probably but my concern is the needless burning up of these works of engineering when it can be prevented by insulating and moving wires and hoses away from or off of extreme heat sources.
your spyder goes up in flames and the insurance company denies your claim because you didn't take the time to put a heat shield or get the electrical wire or fuel line off the exhaust. Because you can bet you last nickle that the insurance companies read these forums too. And by reading them they know what we suspect is the cause and if "We The People" don't take action to correct a dangerous situation then the responsibility lies with us. Just because BRP hasn't come out and said to bring it to the dealer for correction of a safety issue with a machine they sold to the public doesn't mean we should not take the action to do so.
They should not have to do safety of flight problems on aircraft but they are correcting safety of flight issues for the entire life of the airplane. Look at the B-52 for example... it has been around for 50 years and they still have to correct safety problems. And you can bet if the AF sees a problem it gets reported to the manufacturer and the AF grounds the plane or does a rapid interim fix until the manufacturer engineers a permanent fix.
In other words ... "if you saw a 2 year old playing in the middle of a busy street" I'd bet my last Lincoln penny that you would get out there and stop traffic and get the child out of harms way. Now in saying this... the CanAm Sypder has on been available to the general public for two years, therefore, it is that same two year old playing on the street. If it has a possible safety issue you either take it to the dealer or correct it yourself.
It is a common sense safety problem... am I right or am I wrong?:chat:
:gaah:So sorry to hear about your spyder. I do not pull into my garage anymore, I leave it in the driveway for about an 1/2 hour. I do a walk around, and check it every few minutes. This is getting out of hand, and is very scarry. BRP website is awful. I sure hope BRP is on top of this.
:agree:I don't think we should have to do any of these things.
The bike should work right straight out of the box.