This will be the first of a series of critiques covering my trip to Alaska and return. Some of my views may not coincide with yours but they may lead to some constructive discussions. First and foremost at my age (74.5) and mechanical ability (minimal) was/is the Spyder reliable? The answer is that with a the exception of a few hiccups it turned out to be very reliable, that doesn't mean that I had the same confidence that the Wing rider had throughout the trip; It was based on my experience going to Durango and Cuba that I was still "waiting for the other shoe to drop" especially when the first hiccup occurred with my wife on board 360 miles from nowhere. Physcologically it took away from the enjoyment of the ridebut, I would still do it again. The Spyder as a touring bike, when I compare it against the Wing it falls short in two main areas; gas mileage (range) and instrumentation. No doubt a range of 130-150 miles does not stack up against 240 - 310 miles; its not that I don't mind stopping every 100 miles to stretch my legs its when the next gas station is 140 - 200 miles from where I am when I fill up, on some stretches in Alaska an advertised station was out of gas or closed (I did carry and extra 3 gals ), instrumentation: the speed number is easy to read, the rpm needle is ok as well as the speed needle the rest of the gauge panel to put it bluntly "sucks". As I said I'm at the age where I need glasses,both seeing and reading, when I can't read the time,temp, mileage, or settings when I'm moving without getting my face within inches of the screen I become an accident waiting to happen;stopping every time I want to check the mileage or change a cb channel or radio station just does'nt cut if for me, also in a bright sun shiney day or when it glares you can't see the little indicator light like parkbrake on, gas low etc. Take a look at the Wings dash and you can see everything. You might be saying "then why didn't you buy a wing?" and the answer would be I need the extra stability based on physical limitations, I'm sold on the ride just not on these two items. Extra addons: Seal Floorboards- best thing since sliced bread, can't say enough good things about them, Butler Cup- don't leave home without it, Spyder Pops stuff- all worked as advertised except the belt guard came loose and rubbed on the tire, no problem just tightened it and left it on because of all the dirt and gravel roads we had to travel on, Baker Air Wings worked great, especially kept the mud off my legs when on those muddy roads, Corbin Seat - took them four trys but the last one was right on and after the break in period (1000 miles) really made for a comfortable ride. Tires- with 12000 miles on bike rear tire is at wear bars, front tires don't even look like they've been used (must have great alignment on the front end). All in all it was a great adventure that I could not have made on two wheels but there is no doubt in my mind some improvements should be made if you really want to call the Spyder RT a touring bike.
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