^^^ That's first bit's certainly true, Beau, many of the sensors never get moved when the tech's do the Spyder's delivery assembly, but that temp sensor has
NO CHANCE of ever telling you what the 'ambient' or 'outside air' temp is! :shocked: Wherever it ends up, it's invariably well under the tupperware and right in amongst any heat that's generated from the sun beating down on that, and it's also gonna be sitting smack in all the heat radiating and rising from the engine once you fire that up, even if there might be a bit of air flow around it once you start moving!!
Which means that even if someone once thought it might tell the ryder something else, the
ONLY temperature that sensor is reading & reporting is at best (or is it worst?) the 'under body & on top of engine' temperature... a reading that will be fairly close to the intake air temp, even if it might not
actually be the temp reading that's being used by the ECU to control the injection system & tune! :banghead:
So the temperature reading on the dash display is almost always going to be at least 'a tad' higher than ambient (didja like the way I used that really specific scientific term, hey?) unless maybe you are reading it before starting the engine for the very first time in 3 months after leaving the Spyder in a shaded & covered location all winter where no sunlight or external warming can reach the machine! And once you start ryding along the road on a surface that's had any sun warmth on it for a while, the displayed temp could even rise a bit due to any radiated/reflected heat rising from the road surface.... So the reality is, that temp display isn't going to be too great for anything except maybe a ccomparison with the temp during whatever ryding you did yesterday or whatever you do next year! In fact, a needle dial labelled 'Ryder Comfort Temp' with blue, yellow, & red segments would've likely conveyed just as much 'truly useful' info, and probably wouldn't have caused anywhere near the discussion the invariably 'wrong' digital readout does! :gaah: