To brake or not to brake
My advice to you comes from my experience scraping bodies of the road for the last 23 years.3 things to consider. Your skills and abilities and comfort level, the bikes capabilities, and environmental conditions. 3 levels of motorcycles riders, novice, intermediate, and professional. Be honest and rate yourself where you belong based on how long you have been riding, type of riding, and with two wheel types, how comfortable you are leaning a bike tight to the road. Most recreational riders are intermediate to novice, unless you are one of these street guys that can take to the track and lean a bike with your leg open and your knee an inch above the pavement, you are not a pro. The more experienced you are, the smaller you can make your lean angle to the road, the tighter you can corner at higher speeds. And if you think you are a pro and you are not, the lesson is a hard one to learn, and people seldom get a second chance. Whether you are on a bike or in a car, the safest and quickest way to make any type of curve is high low high. In an s curve it is apex to apex. Scrub off your speed before you enter into curve, if you are really good you can brake right up to the apex and accelerate hard from the apex without missing a beat. Most people tend to brake before entering the curve and coast with steady and even throttle application until right after the apex and accelerate out past the apex into the straight away or next curve. I would not recommend making a turn in neutral (clutch pulled in). Acceleration and deceleration through throttle input equals control of the bike. Pulling in the clutch while turning or driving aggressively in a turn is to give up control of your bike. I am not saying that you should never pull your clutch in, there are times and places, but this isn't one of them. In a panic or by inexperience if you release the clutch suddenly in a curve or coming out of a curve without your engine speed matching your vehicle speed (being in the wrong gear), you may lurch and get high sided off the bike (not a high chance of survival), or you may lock up the rear tire and low side the motorcycle (drop the bike). In a Spyder that equates to be thrown off and going for a different sort of ride, without the bike. Sorry not poking at anyone, just don't want to see anyone get hurt. Beautiful thing about our Spyders, 3 wheels and the same safety handling features as most high end cars. The short coming of a Spyder is, we can't lean it like you lean a 2 wheel bike. This means you can't make tighter corners at the same speeds as 2 wheel bike. And as we all know, our arms fatigue sooner. When you corner there is what we call Critical Curve Speed. The speed is determined by the friction your tires have with the road in conjunction with the radius you choose to take a curve at. In a two wheel bike lean angle is factored in for the bike. If you exceed the critical curve speed for your situation, doesn't matter what you are driving, you are done for. I haven't seen what that looks like in a Spyder yet. I am almost certain our VSS would kick in. Keep this in mind though. In a tight right hand curve where you have too much speed going in and the natural reaction is to over steer to the right (our two wheel friends would lean more, we would shift our weight more down and to the inside of curve), there will be strong forces trying to throw you off the left side of the bike. However your brake pedal is on the right side of the bike and we don't have a hand brake. Very few people can overcome the forces required to make a brake application before the speed becomes critical and make a recovery, because these forces are acting against you and time is not on your side. The majority of crashes where people take corners too fast, there isn't any braking, not because they didn't want to brake or think to brake, it is because they can't overcome the forces acting on their bodies required to make a brake application. Anyways...that's enough of that for a day!!!...Every time I get on my Spyder I tell myself I am driving one of the safest motorcycles on the planet, but I am still riding on the outside of a vehicle. Take control of what you can control, because the rest of what happens wont be up to you. Cheers. Is it April yet? I miss my Spyder.