My wife and I picked up our new 2012 RT Limited last week. Of course we immediately jumped on and did 100 miles.
I have to tell you, we weren't impressed. After 35 years of high-performance motorcycles, I was lugging the engine a bit, (I don't know why) and the suspension was, well, awful - as set by the factory. I was afraid we might have made a mistake.
After reading the manual a bit and spending some time here and on other enthusiast sites, I adjusted the front spring pre-load to maximum and decided to go at it a bit differently. (I'm 6'3" 270 lbs and my although my wife isn't heavy, she isn't petite, either) I took a short solo scoot and thought it handled a lot better, although weather and other commitments kept me from doing a thorough test.
Today (Monday) we took the Spyder out again, taking a twisty route with a few those nasty "reverse elevation" curves. I am very pleased to say that the bike held up well, *much* better than on our first 2-up ride. I moved my shift points up a few thousand RPM and did a bit of the "snowmobile booty shuffle" on the worst corners, putting my weight forward and into the curve - helping keep the inside wheel down and the suspension in the "normal" range. I won't normally ride that way 2-up, but this was a test after all.
To get down to it, our "second impression" is that the Spyder will make an interesting middleweight tourer, which is exactly what we were looking for. I'd like to ride an RT with upgraded springs, shocks and sway bar to see whether such things would be worth the investment or not. The bottom line, though, is that the bike now feels safe and comfortable. I'll be a little sad to put it in winter storage later this week.
I have to tell you, we weren't impressed. After 35 years of high-performance motorcycles, I was lugging the engine a bit, (I don't know why) and the suspension was, well, awful - as set by the factory. I was afraid we might have made a mistake.
After reading the manual a bit and spending some time here and on other enthusiast sites, I adjusted the front spring pre-load to maximum and decided to go at it a bit differently. (I'm 6'3" 270 lbs and my although my wife isn't heavy, she isn't petite, either) I took a short solo scoot and thought it handled a lot better, although weather and other commitments kept me from doing a thorough test.
Today (Monday) we took the Spyder out again, taking a twisty route with a few those nasty "reverse elevation" curves. I am very pleased to say that the bike held up well, *much* better than on our first 2-up ride. I moved my shift points up a few thousand RPM and did a bit of the "snowmobile booty shuffle" on the worst corners, putting my weight forward and into the curve - helping keep the inside wheel down and the suspension in the "normal" range. I won't normally ride that way 2-up, but this was a test after all.
To get down to it, our "second impression" is that the Spyder will make an interesting middleweight tourer, which is exactly what we were looking for. I'd like to ride an RT with upgraded springs, shocks and sway bar to see whether such things would be worth the investment or not. The bottom line, though, is that the bike now feels safe and comfortable. I'll be a little sad to put it in winter storage later this week.