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Spyder vs Gold Wing Reverse Trike

Blueslover1

New member
I have been looking for a used Spyder that I can afford, and came across a Honda Gold Wing Reverse Trike. I've never seen one before, but I like the look and the fact that is a Honda. Anyone have experience with one of these? After doing some research, it seems that the one big drawback is that it doesn't have any power assist for the steering. Any thoughts?
 
We have the Hannigan Reverse Trike kit on our 2005 Goldwing and it takes more effort to steer, but is not really an issue. Like anything else, it's what you get used to.
 
As far as I know Honda never made a reverse trike of any variety, so what you're looking at is a kit installed onto a Gold Wing. So, you have the variability of who made the kit and who did the installation. The devil is always in the details. Then after and assuming it's done well and correctly, it will never have any of the advanced safety feature the Spyders have, ie: the "nanny".

The Honda kit does have certain advantages, but it will also come with significant drawbacks.
 
Honda blew it when they didn't follow thru on this :(View attachment 255093
Frankly, I don't think so. They were going to be quite expensive and the demand for them just wasn't there. I think Honda would have lostt money on them and they saw the handwriting on the wall.

The Honda reverse trike conversions have some great and obvious advantages. But it's still a conversion and not a ground up engineered product. The main coomplaint I hear is that Honda will no longer stand behind the product once converted.
 
You might try to Google all the brands of conversion that you can find. I think most of the conversion businesses when out of business leaving owners with a lack of maintenance opportunities and a significant lack of spare parts.

I'm sure few of them had the integrated software safety systems the Can Am Spyder and Ryker has, which may not bother you too much, until one day you really need it.
 
Frankly, I don't think so. They were going to be quite expensive and the demand for them just wasn't there. I think Honda would have lostt money on them and they saw the handwriting on the wall.

The Honda reverse trike conversions have some great and obvious advantages. But it's still a conversion and not a ground up engineered product. The main coomplaint I hear is that Honda will no longer stand behind the product once converted.
I guess we'll never know :(
 
There WAS one on the market made in Holland called the Sturgis R18 trike kit for the Honda GL1800. I seriously looked at and considered it several years ago. One independent dealer in my area had completed two conversions, Turns out that kit had some serious overheating issues, in spite of adding an additional radiator. Just about the time I was getting serious, the company quit sending the kits to the US. I was told that the steering was a little heavy but not too bad. And, the turning radius was extremely big. Bottom line...... It was sure pretty, but the beauty was only skin deep.........
 
Yamaha did make one, but they are hard to find now. I am not sure, but I am thinking that they probably have a forum for them somewhere. I wonder what type of following do they have and how is the quality? They had one at a local dealership, but I never got a chance to give it a test ride.
Yamaha made the Nikken. It wasn't a stand up three wheeler/trike. yamaha-niken-three-wheeled-scooter-designboom-00.jpg
 
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