bluestratos
New member
I have had my ABS save my butt many times, both in my 4 wheels and my Spyder.
thanks for your post. I learned something....Stick with the Spyder for now. They are the safest production made three wheelers in my opinion. ....
Way too long of a paragraph for this old fart to follow, can you break it down and maybe just cover the main points?
Thanks
Way too long of a paragraph for this old fart to follow, can you break it down and maybe just cover the main points?
Thanks
Sorry I write a lot of technical papers and I should have used paragraphs.
Readers digest version:
If you have a three wheel HD and you hammer the rear brake pedal on dry asphalt you are not going to enjoy the ride. You will go side ways and tip, especially if you have a passenger. If it's wet pavement you will spin like a top until you run out of speed and eventually stop. This is because the rear wheel can lock up. I won't buy a three wheel HD until they get ABS.
Your Spyder is way safer. One brake application. All three brakes actuated at the proper braking percentages, no fear of lock up. Rear wheel lock up on a motorcycle in a panic situation is bad. Especially bad when one wheel does the steering and two locked wheels do the tracking. A locked tire wants to lead.
If you are an experienced two wheel rider, this is likely to be less of an issue for you, because you understand the dangers of rear wheel lock up already. And like cars before ABS you understand threshold braking. But in all honesty it hard not to hammer the rear brake when you are ****ting your pants.
If you are like me and my kids you embrace new technology are lazy and want to be able to stand on the brakes and steer and stop and not have to think of tire lock up. So you won't ever buy a bike without abs two or three wheels.
That's the majority of it.
My colleagues and I would love to have a track day of hooking the equipment up and skid testing the bag off of different spyders.
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I was taught that if you are practicing your emergency braking and the ABS kicks in, you're doing it wrong.
In other words, you need to keep practicing to learn where that threshold is so you can maximize your stopping by not losing the friction zone to a point where the ABS has to kick in to regain it.
Just an observation to share. Take from it what you want.
Sorry I write a lot of technical papers and I should have used paragraphs.
Readers digest version:
If you have a three wheel HD and you hammer the rear brake pedal on dry asphalt you are not going to enjoy the ride. You will go side ways and tip, especially if you have a passenger. If it's wet pavement you will spin like a top until you run out of speed and eventually stop. This is because the rear wheel can lock up. I won't buy a three wheel HD until they get ABS.
Your Spyder is way safer. One brake application. All three brakes actuated at the proper braking percentages, no fear of lock up. Rear wheel lock up on a motorcycle in a panic situation is bad. Especially bad when one wheel does the steering and two locked wheels do the tracking. A locked tire wants to lead.
If you are an experienced two wheel rider, this is likely to be less of an issue for you, because you understand the dangers of rear wheel lock up already. And like cars before ABS you understand threshold braking. But in all honesty it hard not to hammer the rear brake when you are ****ting your pants.
If you are like me and my kids you embrace new technology are lazy and want to be able to stand on the brakes and steer and stop and not have to think of tire lock up. So you won't ever buy a bike without abs two or three wheels.
That's the majority of it.
My colleagues and I would love to have a track day of hooking the equipment up and skid testing the bag off of different spyders.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Yeah, everyone is expert riders and should master that whole braking thingy. Even if people practiced it and got good at it, when they are confronted with a very serious emergency situation most, and that includes most of us here, will resort to hitting the brakes as hard as you can whether that is just the foot brake as on a Spyder or a car or front/rear brake combined as on a 2 wheel motorcycle. ABS is a lifesaver because one doesn't have to think - just react. Beyond that just try hitting the brakes hard as you are rounding a curve at speed. Even the real experts have a hard time with that one. Got ABS - just nail lit.
What he said.ABS good.
no ABS bad.