When it fails, everything kind of falls apart in there and you really lose propulsion. We got lucky that both of our failures were at spots where there was a place to pull over. If you drive a lot of interstates and choose the left lanes with lots of traffic, you may want to rethink that until you have the fix. Don's went while we were headed downhill in the mountains, so he was able to coast to a pull-off where we changed out his backseat for my storage and we rode 2 up to go get the trailer and self-rescue. Mine happened on a slight uphill with no place to pull off without going into the grassy ditch. I turned my flashers on and pulled over as far as I could so that cars could still get around me; luckily we happened to be riding together that day (usually I ride alone, so that was pure luck) so then we both pushed it up the hill to a wider pull off and then we rode 2 up to get the trailer. Don's went before mine, and I knew I had red dust so it was only a matter of time for mine -- I started riding more carefully, considering "if my sprocket went now, what would happen?" For me that meant less passing in the mountains and if on the highway, choosing the slower lanes. etc.
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