3,200 + 200 = 3500? I know you are just averaging out for safety's sake.
You don't want to run right on the edge. 100 rpm is the bare minimum safety margin that should be considered.
It's so subtle that the engine doesn't speed up at all?
That's correct. You are very unlikely to notice it until there is significant wear (and slippage), but the clutch plates and discs will...in time.
Isn't this an over-centre clutch that locks up at a certain rpm, but unlocks at a somewhat lower rpm?
It is a centrifugal clutch, that engages and disengages gradually. It is not "on & off". It doesn't "lock up", but gradually engages and disengages.
I would have thought that BRP would have designed the auto shift to not allow engine speeds that would damage the clutch.
So would I. They seem to be trying to correct that error with the recent update. I don't think they envisioned owners trying to operate outside the norminal power band of the engine.
Are you sure they aren't ripping off owners?
:hun:
Or are those having their clutches replaced doing so because they were trickling along in first gear, slipping the clutch, in slow traffic or the like?
Generally, I expect that is the case, as well as trying to use the engine to climb hills at lower speeds, instead of downshifting. Many people used to automatics on cars don't understand the downshifting concept well. The car will kick down with a vacuum or mechanical modulator, to select a better gear. The Spyder won't. The car's torque converter will also slip without wear or damage...something a centrifugal clutch cannot do.
I appreciate your knowledge and willingness to share - thanks. The questions I raise are more rhetorical, directed at BRP themselves, rather than at you as a helpful Spyder man.
Understood. BRP has really done nothing wrong here. They have introduced a vehicle that has attracted a large following of sometimes neophyte users, and has proven to have capabilities that tend to make it ridden a bit differently than what was probably imagined, both in terms of performance and utility. People don't consider the limitations of the platform...they just want three wheels with outstanding stability. To them, all else is secondary. JMHO