So I assume there is a threshold where the stability control takes over and you have to stay below or do you have to just slow down at the same speed as the tire in the air? Seems like it chops the throttle and brakes pretty quickly as the wheel comes up? If this was my bike, I'd probably find a way to disable all the nanny BS because it just makes it unsafe for an aggressive rider who can predict and adapt. The LF wheel might be slowing down faster since that rotor is warped and could be dragging a fair bit more?
On my KTM/Huskys I have installed "Off Road Dongles" that allow shutting that stuff off and remembers your settings until you change them back........I've had the rear ABS almost crash me multiple times over the years and it's a real downer at killing 11:00 wheelies! She definitely would like to disable pressing the mode button at every power up!
The Nanny chopping the throttle &/or applying the brakes quickly is pretty much directly related to how smoothly you lift the wheel &/or react to that happening; and from there on in, it's basically a handful of the first bit in the bolded stuff above; and a fairly equal sized bunch of the second bit... and a warped rotor slowing a wheel faster or irregularly once it's in the air certainly won't be helping!! :banghead:
Smooth control is the key to pretty much everything on a Spyder, and while I too originally thought I wanted to disable or at least damp down the Nanny's intervention, but as I've learnt & become more aware of her foibles and practiced riding riiiiggghhhttt up to the limits (both on the road and on the track/skid-pan), the more I've come to think that Bosch have actually done a
VERY good job at getting the whole thing pretty close to absofreakinlutely spot on!!

hyea:
Admittedly, I do have an upgraded ECU, and I've tossed the krapendas and changed to some real tires, tweaked the suspension a bit, and spent a whole lot of saddle time learning how best to move my weight around to enhance the Spyder's phenomenal stability and traction, but the more I've done (and I've still got a loooong way to go!

) the more convinced I am that none of it makes any real difference if you can't manage to achieve
smooootttthhhh application of
all your riding & control inputs.
And while I don't think you really
HAVE to wait for the Mode thing on any 2023 Spyder any more, I reckon it's pretty easy to get used to that as well - my 2013 doesn't have any of the 'no-wait to start' or 'by-pass the wait' capabilities that started to come out on Spyders from around 2015, so unlike most with newer Spyders, when I'm riding that and not someone else's machine, I
have no choice but to let that thing do its cycle! But I
definitely do NOT WAIT for it any longer!! :lecturef_smilie: I simply turn the key
ON as I reach the bike and before I do anything else; and then by the time I've got my jacket, helmet, & gloves, etc. et al on, & I've swung my leg over the saddle, it's waaaay past the end of the required wait time; and in fact, I'll often press the mode button in the middle of all the gearing up stuff, basically just doing that as soon as it shows up as being ready, and then I can even have the bike running & starting to get the oil circulating by the time I'm ready to go - so it's no longer an issue to me or the Child Bride at all! :thumbup: It doesn't really take most all that long to work out a way that works for them to merge the mandated 'read the bloody safety notice' wait time into their routine.
