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Passenger soaked!

Benmannino

New member
Just rolled in from a fantastic four day ride, we got poured on three times, my wife got drenched, the right fender sprayed right into her chest, if she moved closer to me her back got soaked. 2015 RT
any ideas?
Thanks
Ben
dont say a rain coat. Lol
 
Just rolled in from a fantastic four day ride, we got poured on three times, my wife got drenched, the right fender sprayed right into her chest, if she moved closer to me her back got soaked. 2015 RT. any ideas? Thanks Ben dont say a rain coat. Lol
Could you tell where the spray was coming from? Was it the inside of the fender? Or was it at the bottom trailing edge (where vehicles would put a mud flap)?
 
you louivillian

hahahaha just a quick - yank the chain on ya --- { kidding with you } we are in southern Indiana , went to land between the lakes ride last year poured down on the return to the hotel , and you are pretty much going too get wet , the wife said she was pretty soaked in our down pour I was a bit soaked , we had water resistant apparel still soaked , but our friend on the f-3 he did not get soaked he was drowned ! :roflblack: the r-t models have a better water displacement zone , but you still get soaked -----> conclusion -----> pull under a bridge {frog -togs } check these out if you wish
 
Mud flaps, mud flaps, mud flaps! Three of them, one on each wheel.

Cage...... scrap that!

Rain suit. I didn't say raincoat!!!

The ones my wife and I have worked so well that the last time we put them on (Saturday) the rain clouds that were looking so severe literally collapsed before we got to them! Best darn rain gear I've ever had!!!!:rolleyes:
 
For the heavy stuff you need a rain suit OR waterproof everything. That is why we have waterproof textiles, boots, and gloves. When you need em, you need em. No fun riding wet and cold. :yes:
 
For the heavy stuff you need a rain suit OR waterproof everything. That is why we have waterproof textiles, boots, and gloves. When you need em, you need em. No fun riding wet and cold. :yes:

Amen!!! Water resistant just won't cut it. That includes rain suits with hoods on the jackets that fit under helmets, waterproof boot covers, and gloves.
 
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After the ride home with a new RT 2 years ago, the first thing I put on was a mud flap on the back. My wife got soaked from the water coming up off the rear wheel. It was like a vortex sucking all the water out of the back of the bike and on to my wifes helmet and down her back. The mud flap helped.

Ray
 
Wet

The water was actually coming from the middle of the fender really strange, if you have a site for mudflaps please share.
Thank you
 
I know what your talking about. My fenders spray from the inside also. I have added mud flaps to the rear and both front fenders using 1/8" landscaping rubber. They work great, but I still get water from the inside of the fenders. The only solution I can think of is to remove the front fenders and apply clear silicone where the black plastic meets the painted part. You could add it without removing the fenders if your not worried about being able to see a little silicone. You can see my front flaps in the picture below. The rear flap was not on it yet when this picture was taken. My rear flap is a generic flap from an auto parts store.
IMG_2202.jpg
 
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The water was actually coming from the middle of the fender really strange, if you have a site for mudflaps please share.
Thank you

I just bought one from Lordco ( an auto parts dealer) it's black checker plate and looks good. There is still a sponsor on the main page who sells mud flaps.
 
I agree with the mudflap on the rear wheel. Absolutely necessary, however, there should be factory installed mudflaps on the two front wheels.
From your description, I'd guess you're missing the mudflap on the right wheel.
I also agree with what all the others have said about rain gear. If you wear full raingear, you'll be OK. Anything less and you'll get wet.
There's NO WAY you can ride in the rain without the proper gear and not get wet.
I'm sure you're grateful that you have someone who will ride with you. You're a remarkably lucky man
 
I've never had any problems with spray from the front wheels or fenders, in fact, while ryding solo, if I raise the windscreen & don't stop or go much slower than about 35-40mph I basically don't get wet at all. Yeah, the occasional drop or splatter from over the windscreen, my helmet & visor get a bit wet, and my fingers do too (thinking about fitting 'Bark Busters' for the winter) but the rest of my ryding gear stays mainly dry until the puddle that forms on the pillion seat starts over-flowing & running forwards! And that brings me to ryding with a pillion passenger - the Missus would get SOAKED from behind in even the lightest rain!! Helmet & visor from the front, but the turbulence at the rear of the Spyder would suck up all the spray & lift it over the panniers & top box so that it would then hit the back of her helmet & shoulders, water would run down her neck if she didn't wear a hood, and she'd get REALLY WET from spray due to turbulence lifting all the spray & hitting her from below & behind - the back of her lower legs & under her thighs, water running down her neck & back, & sitting in the ensuing puddle in the seat. She was not impressed...... and I felt every bit of her discomfort!! :opps:

I tried a few different mud flaps to fix this, without much change, then thought about sorting the turbulence back there rather than trying fruitlessly to stop the spray; so after trying a few different spoiler styles, I settled on fitting an expandable rack for the backrest/top box from Rivco, & fitted a 1/8th" thick flat sheet of marine ply onto the top of the rack, converting it into a mini 'whale tail spoiler' & as a result, I now have very successfully sorted the 'getting wet from behind while moving' problem!! Check the rack out here:

https://rivcoproducts.com/shop/can-am-spyder/ca040bk-black/

Sure, if we are driving slowly or in stop/go traffic in the city, then wet weather gear is essential; but now we've got the whale tail spoiler, if we are out touring or heading somewhere out of town &/or cruising somewhere & travelling at speeds of something between about 60 & 80 mph, we generally don't bother to stop for anything short of a cyclone type down pour these days - we get wetter stopping & putting on wet weather gear than we do from just raising the windscreen & keeping on ryding/cruising until we need to fuel up next or we get to wherever we're going!! The whale tail spoiler stops the bulk of the turbulence from behind, which means no spray to soak the pillion & the front & sides of y he RT stay a lot cleaner, cos we ryde in a bubble of mostly rain & spray free air unless we slow below about 40mph, and it's only my fingers & our helmets that ever get wet - & I wear gloves, plus we've got heated hand grips! ;)

Works well, and I notice there is now a 'this is not a luggage rack' spoiler being sold for RT's that looks pretty much identical to the Rivco expandable rack, only solid plate instead of slotted rack, just like our home-made spoiler! Try it, you'll ryde a lot drier, and your pillion passenger, even more so! :thumbup:
 
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I've never had any problems with spray from the front wheels or fenders, in fact, while ryding solo, if I raise the windscreen & don't stop or go much slower than about 35-40mph I basically don't get wet at all. Yeah, the occasional drop or splatter from over the windscreen, my helmet & visor get a bit wet, and my fingers do too (thinking about fitting 'Bark Busters' for the winter) but the rest of my ryding gear stays mainly dry until the puddle that forms on the pillion seat starts over-flowing & running forwards! And that brings me to ryding with a pillion passenger - the Missus would get SOAKED from behind in even the lightest rain!! Helmet & visor from the front, but the turbulence at the rear of the Spyder would suck up all the spray & lift it over the panniers & top box so that it would then hit the back of her helmet & shoulders, water would run down her neck if she didn't wear a hood, and she'd get REALLY WET from spray due to turbulence lifting all the spray & hitting her from below & behind - the back of her lower legs & under her thighs, water running down her neck & back, & sitting in the ensuing puddle in the seat. She was not impressed...... and I felt every bit of her discomfort!! :opps:

I tried a few different mud flaps to fix this, without much change, then thought about sorting the turbulence back there rather than trying fruitlessly to stop the spray; so after trying a few different spoiler styles, I settled on fitting an expandable rack for the backrest/top box from Rivco, & fitted a 1/8th" thick flat sheet of marine ply onto the top of the rack, converting it into a mini 'whale tail spoiler' & as a result, I now have very successfully sorted the 'getting wet from behind while moving' problem!! Check the rack out here:

https://rivcoproducts.com/shop/can-am-spyder/ca040bk-black/

Sure, if we are driving slowly or in stop/go traffic in the city, then wet weather gear is essential; but now we've got the whale tail spoiler, if we are out touring or heading somewhere out of town &/or cruising somewhere & travelling at speeds of something between about 60 & 80 mph, we generally don't bother to stop for anything short of a cyclone type down pour these days - we get wetter stopping & putting on wet weather gear than we do from just raising the windscreen & keeping on ryding/cruising until we need to fuel up next or we get to wherever we're going!! The whale tail spoiler stops the bulk of the turbulence from behind, which means no spray to soak the pillion & the front & sides of y he RT stay a lot cleaner, cos we ryde in a bubble of mostly rain & spray free air unless we slow below about 40mph, and it's only my fingers & our helmets that ever get wet - & I wear gloves, plus we've got heated hand grips! ;)

Works well, and I notice there is now a 'this is not a luggage rack' spoiler being sold for RT's that looks pretty much identical to the Rivco expandable rack, only solid plate instead of slotted rack, just like our home-made spoiler! Try it, you'll ryde a lot drier, and your pillion passenger, even more so! :thumbup:


can you take a pic of your bike, this sounds like an interesting solution.
 
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