JulieMarie
New member
I saw where someone put an RT sway bar on an F3 to reduce lateral pull. Does anyone know anything about how that works? TIA!
You make me feel bad that I come from NEPA. Yes the new sway bar improved my handling, how would you know without ever trying it?I thought about putting (replacing) one on my F3s but will probably not because its BS. I have no issues with my F3s so why pretend I'm improving on a non-issue. Total cost plus installation for a make-pretend improvement? Nope. People will comment on the vast improvement and in reality they are too embarrassed to say they threw away their cash. My thoughts.
I thought about putting (replacing) one on my F3s but will probably not because its BS. I have no issues with my F3s so why pretend I'm improving on a non-issue. Total cost plus installation for a make-pretend improvement? Nope. People will comment on the vast improvement and in reality they are too embarrassed to say they threw away their cash. My thoughts.
Just to clarify your expertise please let the OP know how many miles you have ridden on your F3. I can't speak to the benefits of a BajaRon bar on an F3 but can definitely say that on an RT the improvement is huge and I can back that up with over 125,000 miles with the bar.
I have almost 5,000 miles and counting and I bought my beast this year.
You say you have travelled 125,000 with the bar?
How many miles without the bar?
Do you work for or benefit from Can-Am sales/service/accessories?
Too many machines with aftermarket powertrain "improvements" ended up being a colossal waste of money.
It "might" have a slight noticeable improvement but is it worth the $$.$$$?
This is like another thread recently where BRP had to post on this forum to stop the usual culprits from disseminating their BS.
I'll rely on the lab coat wearing engineers who designed the machine versus the unknown forum blogger. My thoughts
You are an unknown forum blogger as well. Since a swaybar has nothing to do with the powertrain your opinion...
I have almost 5,000 miles and counting and I bought my beast this year.
You say you have travelled 125,000 with the bar?
How many miles without the bar?
Do you work for or benefit from Can-Am sales/service/accessories?
Too many machines with aftermarket powertrain "improvements" ended up being a colossal waste of money.
It "might" have a slight noticeable improvement but is it worth the $$.$$$?
This is like another thread recently where BRP had to post on this forum to stop the usual culprits from disseminating their BS.
I'll rely on the lab coat wearing engineers who designed the machine versus the unknown forum blogger. My thoughts
I have almost 5,000 miles and counting and I bought my beast this year.
You say you have travelled 125,000 with the bar?
How many miles without the bar?
Do you work for or benefit from Can-Am sales/service/accessories?
Too many machines with aftermarket powertrain "improvements" ended up being a colossal waste of money.
It "might" have a slight noticeable improvement but is it worth the $$.$$$?
This is like another thread recently where BRP had to post on this forum to stop the usual culprits from disseminating their BS.
I'll rely on the lab coat wearing engineers who designed the machine versus the unknown forum blogger. My thoughts
It "might" have a slight noticeable improvement but is it worth the $$.$$$?
Yes I am an unknown blogger but I am not trying to sell something or get someone to buy anything.
Yes the swaybar does effect the powertrain/handling. Any deviation from the manufacturer specs alters something somewhere.
If the Can-Am engineers wanted a fatter sway bar with metal fasteners they would have added them from day one.
My ryde stays level while cornering and that's with the factory sway bar with plastic fasteners.
I'll stick with BRP engineers over someone trying to make cash by selling fear any day. My thoughts.