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Out of control!

Lamont was also captured in a photo on his Spyder with his front wheel off the ground........ All trikes can lift a wheel if pushed hard enough. :doorag:
Lifting a wheel is actually pretty easy... :D
We've got our Nanny along for the ride, and she keeps the fun from getting a bit... unhandy! :yikes:
 
I rode a Harley Tri-glide once for about a mile. Pulled over and told my friend he could ride it back to the store. By the time he got back to the store he was terrified !.. It felt like it wanted to tip over the entire time I rode it. No thanks !! Spyder all the way !!!
 
I've ridden the Tri-Glides also... I found them to be immensely powerful in 3rd gear roll-ons! :bowdown:
All of the controls were heavier, and on a rough road; they'd be a handful. The seat was soft and cushy, and the stereo was awesome.
Oeverall; they were a pleasant ride, and I bet that you could rack up a whole lot of highway miles on them in comfort! :D
But I'll keep my :spyder2: also!
 
The reason this photo came up today was that it was on Killboy's highlights list from last week. Along with many other photos, there was one of a guy on a Spyder that was taking a curve in the wrong lane. To top it off he was wearing shorts. :lecturef_smilie:
 
It takes all kinds

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Yep, saw a harley trike go off through the corner and down into the woods. Kinda looked like the goldwing trike before she lost total control. The attached photo, both spyders are in the oncoming lane of travel. Got to stay in your lane:gaah:
 

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Test drove a Tri Glide back in 2010 before I bought my first Spyder. When I got back to the dealer, the salesman had all the paperwork filled out. I handed him the keys and got in my truck and left. Next week I drove the Spyder, signed on the dotted line and the rest, as they say...
 
Test drove a Tri Glide back in 2010 before I bought my first Spyder. When I got back to the dealer, the salesman had all the paperwork filled out. I handed him the keys and got in my truck and left. Next week I drove the Spyder, signed on the dotted line and the rest, as they say...

I demoed the Tri Glide also. It would have been my first ever Harley. I felt like I was operating a bulldozer. The salesman thought he had the sale in the bag. He was pissed when he found out a bought my Spyder.:yes:
 
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Yep, saw a harley trike go off through the corner and down into the woods. Kinda looked like the goldwing trike before she lost total control. The attached photo, both spyders are in the oncoming lane of travel. Got to stay in your lane:gaah:


Yeah, and like SpyderAnne pointed out, wearing shorts. Figures!:banghead: The guy on the motorcycle behind them is probably going, "Look at those idiots wearing shorts and riding in the oncoming lane."
 
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When I was at the Dragon last year I tried like hell to pull a front wheel off the ground. I dont think I did, or did I:dontknow: and I just could not feel it. My significant other was on the back and she is a real leaner, I mean she really leans on sharp corner, because she knows I am not slowing down. So maybe she helped to kept the front wheel down?
 
I can go around the block and raise the wheel on the corner. But, I have my bike really tight. I have 2 spring stiffeners on each side and 2 on the rear spring, a bar that runs across from one side to the other for my hiway bars (you can stand on these they are so strong), and attached to the bump skid and the bar I have a large screen that ties the whole thing together. Not much flex in the frame on my bike. I like it tight! The neat thing I have learned is that even though it is as tight as it is, the nanny still does her job when absolutely needed!
 
a dealer told me one of their service techs did it -- backwards through their parking lot with a hard turn at the end.

Riding a Spyder in reverse gives it the same disadvantages as a standard trike.

Lifting a wheel on the Spyder is not really that big a deal. But on a Goldwing trike, it is very NOT GOOD! It's a lot like high siding 2 wheels. Once that inside wheel starts to come up there isn't much to stop it from going all the way unless you have room to steer into the roll and get that thing back down on the ground.

Looks to me like those Spyders on the Dragon are just being lazy. But you play like you practice. Getting lazy and running in the wrong lane when you can get away with it teaches you bad habits that can get you in big trouble. Even when you can see and 'Cheat' safely. Take the opportunity to do it right anyway. It could save your bacon down the road.
 
Riding a Spyder in reverse gives it the same disadvantages as a standard trike.

Lifting a wheel on the Spyder is not really that big a deal. But on a Goldwing trike, it is very NOT GOOD! It's a lot like high siding 2 wheels. Once that inside wheel starts to come up there isn't much to stop it from going all the way unless you have room to steer into the roll and get that thing back down on the ground.

Looks to me like those Spyders on the Dragon are just being lazy. But you play like you practice. Getting lazy and running in the wrong lane when you can get away with it teaches you bad habits that can get you in big trouble. Even when you can see and 'Cheat' safely. Take the opportunity to do it right anyway. It could save your bacon down the road.

I just about ate a Harly in my truck today. Guy come around a corner too hot and jumped into our lane. I swerved and barely missed him, but a split second earlier and he would have been toast. Nothing I could have done.
 
I've never been to the Dragon but I've ridden plenty of curvy roads where I could find them (on two wheels, nothing major on the Spyder yet). There are idiots on every brand and every type of bike. Learn to ride what you're on.

Saw a video of a guy with skill on a Goldwing riding the Dragon behind two sport bikes a few years ago. The wing rider knew his machine and the sport bike riders did not know theirs. The wing was tight and fluid and the sport bikes were all over the place...puts things in perspective. I'm sure it's somewhere on youtube but I couldn't find it.

My favorite is still the Harley (and to a lesser extent Victory and other larger cruiser) riders who would talk smack to some crotch rocket owner and then walk their own bike through a U-turn or drag their feet on stops and starts. I was always proud of the ground down feeler bars on my floorboards when I owned a cruiser. :doorag:
 
Test drove a Tri Glide back in 2010 before I bought my first Spyder. When I got back to the dealer, the salesman had all the paperwork filled out. I handed him the keys and got in my truck and left. Next week I drove the Spyder, signed on the dotted line and the rest, as they say...

I demoed the Tri Glide also. It would have been my first ever Harley. I felt like I was operating a bulldozer. The salesman thought he had the sale in the bag. He was pissed when he found out a bought my Spyder.:yes:

Similar story . . . was drawn by the Harley, rode it, and never went back . . .
 
. . . Looks to me like those Spyders on the Dragon are just being lazy. But you play like you practice. Getting lazy and running in the wrong lane when you can get away with it teaches you bad habits that can get you in big trouble. Even when you can see and 'Cheat' safely. Take the opportunity to do it right anyway. It could save your bacon down the road.

Well said. :2thumbs:
 
I have had a wheel in the air a few times on some of the twisties I like to ride. But I was wearing jeans and a jacket at the time so the fashion police at least will be happy!
 
In Washington state, you have to take a trike/side car class to be legal to drive one. A motorcycle endorsement isn't enough. I took the class last Thursday and Friday. One of the instructors ask me to try and get a front wheel off the ground in one of the practice exercises. I told him sure thing. First curve on the course, I brought the left front wheel up for a second or two before the nanny kicked in.
 
A couple of weeks ago I was with several 'wing riders on a short twisty hill called Greer Grade west of Kamiah, ID. I went into a curve signed at 15 mph as fast as I dared. Front tire squealed so loud the guy in front of me heard it. No idea if the inside tire lifted or not but Nanny sure kicked in quick! :clap: Actually she kicked in, then out, then in again all in just a couple of seconds or so.
 
A couple mentions of the very old ATC Honda's. I rode a Big Red (250) with a CB 750 engine in it. Scary but ride-able. Made for copletely different then on road.

Without getting in the war on Honda Trikes, it has to be remembered they are all conversions, not factory. Rear suspensions/axles vary widely. Harleys have both conversions and the Factory Tri-Glide. Not sure about their kits for conversions.
Oldmanzues
 
I too tried a TriGlide

I test drove a Harley Tri-Glide in 2014. Loved it, bought it, ride it. It is a little rougher riding and my wife needed a softer ride so we bought her a Spyder. I relate the two as she drives a caddy and I drive a Mack truck. I love my Mack Truck but maybe someday a shiny black Spyder will be in my garage to go with her white one. I hope we can tell them apart.

=bob=
 
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