I just ordered the Baja Ron sway bar.
Not sure what a Vss intervention is.
She does not lean in the turn unless I ask her
For the most part she just sits there relaxed.
It just doesn't handle well in the turns
The thing about Spyders is that if you want to ride them a bit more than gently, both you and your pillion
MUST become
much more involved than you would on a 2-wheeled motorcycle,
or it won't handle well in the turns, maybe also not on the straights either. :banghead:
At their most basic level, just about anyone can ride a 2-wheeled motorcycle
once they get the thing moving, because there's two dirty great gyroscopes (the wheels!) keeping everything upright and wanting to go straight ahead; and all it takes to turn is to lean in the direction you want to go... Sure, there's skill in going faster, pointing it where you want to go, and judging the amount of lean necessary for cornering etc, but the physics of it all actively helps a 2-wheeled bike rider in many ways. And if people can get over their innate prejudices & fears about riding harder, faster, & leaning more, it's a naturally intuitive progression from there; as you get more confident you learn how far to lean and how to use the handlebars & throttle to help make those turns; but it's all fairly intuitive, and until you start riding harder/going faster there's not much actual 'work' or 'effort' involved, so
MOST people can actually stay upright on a 2-wheeler
AND make some pretty reasonable turns, without much need for upper body strength or movement.
And at its most basic level, the same applies to Spyders...
IF you don't want to ride it all that fast or turn it too hard, you & any pillion can simply sit on it like half-filled sacks of potatoes and tootle around with little effort, nice and relaxed and enjoying the view -and that's fine, if that's what you want to do!
BUT,
once you decide you want to ride harder &/or turn quicker etc, it's
NOT so intuitive anymore and you're going to hafta
WORK HARDER to do this - because it
doesn't lean and make things easy for you, the Spyder is going to feel like it's trying to throw you off on the outside of any corner or turn,
and if you & your pillion don't become actively involved and WORK with the Spyder to help it turn harder & faster, it's gonna feel like it doesn't handle well at all! The brisker you want to ride, the
MORE you
both hafta lean into the turns and become active participants in physically riding this machine that's trying its hardest to throw you off! :shocked: The faster you want to ride and to turn, the more work
YOU BOTH are going to hafta do! If you don't, it's not going to be a great ride; but if you both
DO start leaning into the turns and working
with the Spyder to help counter all the '
throw you off' forces that 2-wheeled bike riders never really get to experience (well, not until it all goes truly pear shaped anyway! :sour: ) then the better you'll both feel about the ride, the more agile the Spyder will feel, and the faster you'll be able to dive
IN to corners; the harder you'll be able to turn
THRU the corners; and the quicker you'll be able to get on the gas on the way
OUT of the corners, all without the concerns for bumps or slippery/loose surfaces that the '
not working as hard' 2-wheeled bike rider hasta worry about! So once you are actively involved in riding your Spyder and doing anything much more than sitting there like a quite relaxed half filled sack of potatoes, it gets closer to becoming the far more agile and quicker thru the tight stuff machine than any 2-wheeled motorcycle ever could be - but you and your pillion will only get out of it as much as you put in!
Once you start pushing yourself &/or your Spyder a bit harder/faster, it becomes a trade-off - 2-wheeled bike riders don't hafta work so hard or think so much about the actual riding '
process' anywhere near so much because it's so intuitive and the dirty great gyroscopes (wheels) at each end of the machine will be working to
KEEP them upright &/or cornering iaw their lean angle, but they
do hafta think about the road surface & how far they can lean before their (tiny) tire contact patches lose any grip on the road et al; while Spyder/Ryker riders have nowhere near the concerns about their steed's stability and grip, but they
DO hafta think more about and work harder to counteract all the forces that are seeking to throw them off instead of helping them stay on like they do on that 2-wheeled bike! :lecturef_smilie:
Ps: If you don't already know what a VSS Intervention is, then it's unlikely that you've been riding hard enough; pushing the extremities of your Spyder's capabilities enough; or doing anything silly enough to have woken the Nanny up & triggered too much in the way of a Vehicle Stability System (VSS) Intervention already!

If you
HAD done enough to get anything more than maybe get a quick flash of the Spyder profile with squiggly lines behind each wheel that appears momentarily on the dash as the Nanny steps in to keep your rear wheel from spinning too much, then you would know it!! :lecturef_smilie: A full on VSS Intervention is very noticeable, and not really something you want to aim to trigger, cos basically, it means the Nanny gets very busy saving your butt from whatever unstable or uncontrolled situation you've managed to end up in, and she can use pretty much any & every controllable feature of the Spyder except to change where you've pointed the handlebars - so make sure you
ALWAYS point those handlebars where you
WANT TO GO, and not at anything you want to avoid!! :gaah:
The VSS/Nanny can save you from a
LOT of things, but she can't save you from an excess of your own stupidity, so please, leave that at home when you go out riding! :thumbup: