RideOn
Member
I've had my Spyder RTL for 14 months, and I just made a new (to me) discovery.
If I allow the RTL to slow down by using engine braking, it frequently fails to downshift as I would expect. For instance, I was out yesterday and slowed from 55 mph down to about 30 strictly by closing the throttle. When I cranked the throttle again, the transmission was still in 5th gear and simply bogged at under 2000 rpm. I had to manually downshift to get going again, then all was well.
Next time around, I had to slow using the brakes, and I noticed the transmission downshifted as you might expect, progressively dropping gears as my speed slowed. I tried this a number of times, and every time I hit the brake the trans downshifted quickly after. If I simply coasted, it did not.
So, I'm not saying this is unexpected behavior as far as I can tell, but is it possible that using the brake pedal sends a signal to the powertrain that it should downshift as speed drops? And that simply coasting under engine braking does not automatically trigger similar downshifts? Is it just my Spyder?
This behavior was very consistent throughout my ride, although I'd never particularly noticed it before. Maybe someone else has noticed this too? There are lots of threads about shifting the SE transmission, but I've not run across this particular observation before now.
Thanks,
Bob
If I allow the RTL to slow down by using engine braking, it frequently fails to downshift as I would expect. For instance, I was out yesterday and slowed from 55 mph down to about 30 strictly by closing the throttle. When I cranked the throttle again, the transmission was still in 5th gear and simply bogged at under 2000 rpm. I had to manually downshift to get going again, then all was well.
Next time around, I had to slow using the brakes, and I noticed the transmission downshifted as you might expect, progressively dropping gears as my speed slowed. I tried this a number of times, and every time I hit the brake the trans downshifted quickly after. If I simply coasted, it did not.
So, I'm not saying this is unexpected behavior as far as I can tell, but is it possible that using the brake pedal sends a signal to the powertrain that it should downshift as speed drops? And that simply coasting under engine braking does not automatically trigger similar downshifts? Is it just my Spyder?
This behavior was very consistent throughout my ride, although I'd never particularly noticed it before. Maybe someone else has noticed this too? There are lots of threads about shifting the SE transmission, but I've not run across this particular observation before now.
Thanks,
Bob