Welcome to the club
Hi Dave here,
Well a few years ago I think 2011 I was t-boned while riding my Honda ST1100
while sitting at a STOP sign " I had just had my knees replaced 8 weeks earlier"
I am a Charter Life member of AMA past President of AMA Dist. 36 and have riden
motorcycles my whole life I am now 76 years old with 62 riding years behind me.
My wife told me "BUDDY" if you want me to ride with you again you better get
something that don't tip over...I said what does that have to do with being run down by
an uninsured DRUNK with no drivers lic. have to do with it... I was sitting still at a Stop Sign.
She said do it...
We shopped around for what was available, even gave though to having my GoldWing
made into a trike, ended up buying a Spyder in Rancho Cordova, CA about 50 miles north
of where we live in Linden, Julie was following me home, I was ALL OVER THE ROAD
scared hell out of myself trying to ride this damn thing home without being killed.
all the way home I was thinking man I just made a BIG expensive mistake.... about half way
home I pulled into a place for coffee and cool my nerves... my wife said QUOTE you are a danger
to yourself and everyone on the road on that thing, no way I am getting on it until you learn how
to ride it. I too was doing all the things you said, trying to counter steer, grabbing for a brake handle
that was not there and NO damn clutch...this thing is nuts...
Will in an effort to save face and not loose money I rode it all the time on back roads with no traffic
until I got the hang of it, You MUST practice and you will get the hang of it, I now have 30K on that one
and it is my long distance ride when going some place far away, I still have motorcycles I ride but only
local short hops 100 miles or so or less.
Have faith you will get the hang of it and grow to enjoy it...
Ride Safe
Dave
A (very nice and helpful) local dealer let me take a 2017 RT for a test ride today. I barely out of the parking lot before having to call it off. Unfortunately, I found that I'm profoundly unsafe riding a Spyder. (Note that I'm not saying the *Spyder* is unsafe, just that *I* can't seem to operate one correctly.)
Apparently the subconscious reflexes and muscle memory from 40 years and 100,000+ miles on two wheels was something I just couldn't suppress. I kept instinctively leaning, countersteering, reaching for the front brake, trying to put my foot down at stops, and all the other things that you do on bikes that you must *not* do on Spyders. I'd keep turning left when I needed to go right, etc....
A Spyder might not be such a good idea for me, after all. Any older, long-term 2-wheel riders who had this problem and could tell me how long it took you to get past this phase? It looks like I'd have to spend an awful lot of time with a Spyder on a vacant lot somewhere - on a road with traffic, I'd be a menace.