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New and need advice

Questions

New member
Hi, I am new to this and would like advice from this group. I am planning on retiring within the next year and would like to be able to tour on a bike, (trike). My wife will not ride on a two wheeler at all. Since I plan on almost always being 2 up, would you recommend a traditional trike or the Spyder. I am leaning towards the Spyder, but... I am also reading that the Spyder is uncomfortable for a passenger and the seat get too hot for extended riding, etc. Is this the case and is there anything thing you would do differently if you could do it over? With my wife, I probably only have one shot at this and want to get it right. :D
 
Hi, I am new to this and would like advice from this group. I am planning on retiring within the next year and would like to be able to tour on a bike, (trike). My wife will not ride on a two wheeler at all. Since I plan on almost always being 2 up, would you recommend a traditional trike or the Spyder. I am leaning towards the Spyder, but... I am also reading that the Spyder is uncomfortable for a passenger and the seat get too hot for extended riding, etc. Is this the case and is there anything thing you would do differently if you could do it over? With my wife, I probably only have one shot at this and want to get it right. :D

Get a spyder RT. You won't be disappointed. I haven't had any heat problems.
 
Hi, I am new to this and would like advice from this group. I am planning on retiring within the next year and would like to be able to tour on a bike, (trike). My wife will not ride on a two wheeler at all. Since I plan on almost always being 2 up, would you recommend a traditional trike or the Spyder. I am leaning towards the Spyder, but... I am also reading that the Spyder is uncomfortable for a passenger and the seat get too hot for extended riding, etc. Is this the case and is there anything thing you would do differently if you could do it over? With my wife, I probably only have one shot at this and want to get it right. :D

My wife told me she would go 2 up only we got a Spyder. She is 6 ft and is comfortable on it. We have not gone on any cross country trips - only day rides so take this info as such. We have done as much as two to three hundred miles in a day. Ours is a 2012 RT and as such we stop a lot for gas:) That gives us a few minutes to stretch. We don't have any heat issues.
 
Touring

If I wanted a Spyder to go touring then my choice would be a new 2014 RT Limited and a trailer.
Enjoy your retirement.
 
Depends..!

you have to consider yoursekf as well. It will be a joint venture. I feel you will be happier driving a roadster than a trike both comfort and handling. If you are not comfortable driving then neither will enjoy much ryding. Can't stress enough the test ryde will tell. Then you can tweek comfort for both..!! :thumbup:
 
:welcome: (Potentiallly... :D)
You will get a very biased opinion in here... nojoke
So here's mine! :roflblack:
The Spyder will handle much better than a Tri-Glide; if you push them both to where the pace gets "interesting"... :shocked:
The SE-6 on the new RT is just amazing! Paddle shifting may seem as if you're detracting from the "Biker Experience"; until you use it a bit.
Trailering was mentioned for long-distance touring; BRP makes it pretty easy to hook one up, and hit the road. Harley does not.

Now...
The Tri-Glide offers a VERY comfortable ride. MoCo has distance-riding figured out! :thumbup: But the controls are all a bit "heavier". They've also just released a new (sort of) liquid-cooled engine for their big Tourers; it might take some time for the results of their efforts to be seen in the real World.
 
you have to consider yoursekf as well. It will be a joint venture. I feel you will be happier driving a roadster than a trike both comfort and handling. If you are not comfortable driving then neither will enjoy much ryding. Can't stress enough the test ryde will tell. Then you can tweek comfort for both..!! :thumbup:

Both styles of trikes are expensive so :agree: - try them both and pick the one that suites you best because each has it's strong and weak points. I will tell you that it takes time for a spyder to "grow" on you, so the initial test drive may not tell you much. I know, it didn't me, but I spent a lot of time on two wheelers. I'm just crossing 1000 miles and am now just getting to start feeling comfortable with the spyder.
 
only problem is.....

My wife had also settled on a Spyder for our retirement bike as she had never done two wheels by herself and had taken a very bad spill on her bicycle several years back ending up in the hospital . She liked the comfort of the Spyder and felt safer , My big problem is that after less than a year of riding behind, she is went out , passed her endorsement test and is running the wheels of the thing and it looks like I need to figure out haw to afford another one !
 
Comfort

I have an RTS and at Spyderfest we purchased a brand new Ultimate seat. I love it the Long haired Col does not; however she sat on the new 2014 stock seat with a backrest and loved it; therefore the Ultimate is going back and the plan is to purchase a stock seat. I agree with everyone else it is something you have to ride but growing up on two wheelers and three wheelers I found that the Spyder performs and handles much better IMHO. Whatever you decide enjoy retirement and I am sure we will see you on the road.
 
If I wanted a Spyder to go touring then my choice would be a new 2014 RT Limited and a trailer.
Enjoy your retirement.
You don't need a trailer...do what I do...wear clothes for three days. Go to Wal-Mart. Buy new ones. Throw the old ones away. It is cheaper than a trailer.
 
We have same wife!

We were retired one year when she allowed she would consider ryding on the spyder and that was the only way she'd get on a motorcycle. This was due to a death when she was young and her position was firm. She was nervous at first but now really enjoys it, though we try to stay off heavily traveled roads and our longest trip to date has been three nights. We got the roadster first but decided the tourer more closely met our needs. It's a 2013 RTL and we have had no problems. It has added to our enjoyment of retirement life. We're small 5'3" and 5'6" and have been quite comfortable. Looking forward to a trip out west this summer towing the Spyder.
 
Happy wife, happy life!

So I'm going to jump in here with the rest of the crew - a spyder rt is absolutely the machine for touring, trailer or not. Similar tales about the wife - I started riding again about 2 years ago - call it a midlife crisis:). After a bit, she started riding with me but just didn't feel comfortable on 2 wheels. We had talked bout a spyder, but I liked,them2 wheel thing at first. So we went to our dealer a bit north of here - to look at a bigger bike and a spyder. Well, one test ride on the spyder and we were hooked! They had a great deal on a 2012 RT Limited with 4500 miles on it and we brought if home the same day. We love riding it (short or long) and often it's her that says "let's take the bike". :yes::bowdown::ohyea::thumbup:

I'd definitely stay away from the 13's as you'll see on here, but my 2012 has been darn near perfect,

good luck!
 
I just retired also and didn't test ride the Spyder till that time, Took my wife on the Spyder for the first test drive she felt safe and I loved it and it was sitting at my house the next week. :2thumbs:
 
Couple of years back we went on a 10-day tour of Spain. Our RT was the only trike among a bunch of regular motorcyclists, mostly 2-up. By about day four the ladies had voted among themselves that our Spyder's pillion seat was their favorite place to ride and they reached this decision without ever having sat on it! They did it by the look of the seat alone. Needless to say my wife agreed! The comfort of the RT is a winner. :thumbup:
 
The hot seat issue pertains to SOME 2013 Spyders only. If you avoid the 2013, you won't have to worry about it. There was a major change in 2014, going to a larger 3 cyl engine (1330 vs 998 twin) and a 6 speed vs 5. Members here love the 14.

I am in the same boat as you, and if you are patient and persistent with the Search utility, you can find some very good info on this topic.
 
My 2012 Spyder RT has two big advantages over a trike. The SE5 auto transmission and two wheels in front designed like a car. I rode two wheelers from 1957 to 2012. The front of trikes are designed for two wheeling where making a corner compresses front wheel springs and shocks with no side load because you turn by leaning into corner. When putting two wheels on the back of a motorcycle (trike), the front forks now have a tremendous side load in turns that the original designers did not intend. If you are going to do much mountain driving with sharp turns, I would stay away from trikes for that reason.
 
My advice is ride the 14' RT

Hi, I am new to this and would like advice from this group. I am planning on retiring within the next year and would like to be able to tour on a bike, (trike). My wife will not ride on a two wheeler at all. Since I plan on almost always being 2 up, would you recommend a traditional trike or the Spyder. I am leaning towards the Spyder, but... I am also reading that the Spyder is uncomfortable for a passenger and the seat get too hot for extended riding, etc. Is this the case and is there anything thing you would do differently if you could do it over? With my wife, I probably only have one shot at this and want to get it right. :D

ride the Harley and the Wing Trike. The Harley ride is leaves much to be desired, storage is minimal, however dealer network and support are second to none. Wing is comfortable, storage better than Harley and you get the rock solid Honda reliability, a good dealer network and torque and power unmatched. TheWing triked just doesn't feel like a natural fit in corners and on long rides, the handling and effort seem subpar, then maneuvering in parking lots leaves a little to be desired. Ride them all, take a few days to think, narrow it down and you will be happy. Regarding the Spyder, go with a 14' if you are able, and spend some time on this forum and you will learn a lot. Good Luck!!
 
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