I have a 14 basic RT, I'm building a trailer - so knowing where the balance point is will save a lot of trial & error, because I can position the axel for best towing ( weight front to rear ) …. Thanks , much ….. Mike
hyea:
Hi Mike,
If you're building a trailer: it's the trailer's balance point that matters.
Of course; you'd like the balance point of it to be somewhat forward of the actual center point of the trailer (fully loaded: 10% or so: F.O.C)
It sounds as if you're looking for the Spyder's balance point: I that correct? :shocked:
Something doesn't compute. Are you saying the trailer weighs around 1000#? That seems awfully high for an aluminum trailer. The Spyder weighs about 850# so the total weight is, of course, the Spyder plus trailer. If you have 200# on the coupler and you're guessing that's 10% that means the whole rig is close to 2000#. I'm thinking you have a lot more than 10% on the coupler, as in more like 15 to 20%. If you have just the Spyder and trailer as pictured I think you want the coupler weight to be closer to 150#. The guideline is 10 to 15% of total weight on the coupler, and 40/60 split of load over the trailer axle.I don't know if this will help, but this is how I have my trailer set up with the RT. I had heard the balance point was where the front peg was. For this setup, I moved the bike back and forth a bit till I got it to about 200 lbs. That is about 10% of the total weight of the rig and it seems to tow very well.
Something doesn't compute. Are you saying the trailer weighs around 1000#? That seems awfully high for an aluminum trailer. The Spyder weighs about 850# so the total weight is, of course, the Spyder plus trailer. If you have 200# on the coupler and you're guessing that's 10% that means the whole rig is close to 2000#. I'm thinking you have a lot more than 10% on the coupler, as in more like 15 to 20%. If you have just the Spyder and trailer as pictured I think you want the coupler weight to be closer to 150#. The guideline is 10 to 15% of total weight on the coupler, and 40/60 split of load over the trailer axle.
Something doesn't compute. Are you saying the trailer weighs around 1000#? That seems awfully high for an aluminum trailer. The Spyder weighs about 850# so the total weight is, of course, the Spyder plus trailer. If you have 200# on the coupler and you're guessing that's 10% that means the whole rig is close to 2000#. I'm thinking you have a lot more than 10% on the coupler, as in more like 15 to 20%. If you have just the Spyder and trailer as pictured I think you want the coupler weight to be closer to 150#. The guideline is 10 to 15% of total weight on the coupler, and 40/60 split of load over the trailer axle.
That all sounds good! A Google search brings up 9 to 15% as the best tongue weight so your 150 to 200 range fits.Trailer weighs about 6-700 lbs. Bike weighs around 900. Also has the cargo box mounted in the front that has maybe 20-30 lbs of "stuff" including tiedowns and the box itself. So figure around 15-1600 for the total rig weight. 10% would be somewhere between 150-200 lbs tongue wt. I would have it a bit more toward the heavier side then lighter so the whole rig doesnt porpoise.
You're not missing anything!!! I was remembering back to my Goldwing days. :banghead: The 2005 GW dry weight is 792 lbs. Like you say, the RT is 1012 lbs.I must be missing something. There have been a couple quotes of weight of the Spyder at 850 and 900lbs, but every online spec sheet I just looked at listed a 2014RT dry weight at 1012. What am I missing?