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Electraglider_1997
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 11:29 am: |
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http://www.wheels24.co.za/Content/BikesQuads/NewMo dels/70/0b3938adfb064d8b819fbd6e6029bbef/Harley_ge ts_triking_with_V-twin |
Electraglider_1997
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 11:34 am: |
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This article claims that it will use the air cooled engine. Don't ya think the V-Rod motor would have been neat to use in this application?? Anyways, if this thing is for real then sign me up for a demo. Never liked the idea of a 3 wheeler with 2 in the rear but 2 wheels up front is just darn cool. Can-Am Spyder is nice looking but I'd buy the Harley before a Spyder. (Message edited by electraglider_1997 on September 19, 2008) |
Edgydrifter
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 12:12 pm: |
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Motorcyclist magazine really panned the Can-Am in the latest issue. As you might guess, the basic problem is that it's top-heavy and you can "fly" the inside wheel way too easily going around a corner. On the other hand, they had great things to say about the Piaggio Mp3 because of it's ability to lean like a regular bike. I've seen a couple Can-Ams around town. They look like they'd be a ton of fun for long rides on the superslab, but less so on the twisty byways or stuck in light-to-light city traffic. |
Ft_bstrd
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 12:24 pm: |
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I'd really like to see how this comes out. One of the things that is a hold up with the Can-Am is the flat cornering. A leaning trike would not suck. I agree, a V-Rod would be a better powerplant. Radiator placement would be easer since you could position it in the front. My guess is that either the powerplant isn't pre-determined and could be the V-Rod engine since the patent is for the leaning linkages or that they V-Rod isn't being considered for this iteration in an effort to keep prices lower. |
Sparky
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 01:43 pm: |
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This is undoubtedly the trickest thing Harley could ever come out with. Much better concept than the Can-Am which leans the wrong way around turns. Yeah, all those pivoting linkages brings back memories of the Equalean sidecar rig on my FXRT that I used to go canyon carving with a few years ago. Was kinda exciting to drag the pegs with the kid in the sidecar and wife on the back seat! Right turns didn't slow us down at all, unlike the rigid (Harley, et al) sidecars. |
Cityxslicker
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 01:59 pm: |
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Can am is already building it, why not use the Buell Rotax and keep the family geneology going. Besides a Buell Three wheeler would have to CORNER |
Madduck
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 02:52 pm: |
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I've ridden the Can Am twice now. It scares the hell out of me, when it lifts the front wheel going around the corner the computers kick in and cut the power causing the bike to run wide. Without the computer you would really be in little to no trouble. Cutting power in the middle of a corner is just a bad idea. |
Electraglider_1997
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 05:10 pm: |
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Harley has an aging demographic and a 3 wheeler like this would be just the ticket for those gummers who find a two wheeler just too hard to handle. I could see enclosing it for winter use. It's enlightening to hear about the handling issues of the Spyder. Seems that should have been considered before they started production. Piaggio has a hybrid 3 wheeler with an electric motor on the rear axle . Now that is progressive. I also heard something about a hybrid scooter that they claimed gets 140 to 170 mpg. http://www.ecogeek.org/content/view/857 http://blog.digiola.com/2008/07/vespa-lx50-hys-hyb rid-motor-scooter.html |
Ft_bstrd
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 05:40 pm: |
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Cutting power in the middle of a corner is just a bad idea. Not considering the target market. These will be purchased and ridden by previously non-riders. The power cut off is what will keep these folks with little experience in wheel slip and traction management out of the ditches. Folks who push the envelope on two wheels would find the loss of traction and balance alarming and the power interruption intrusive. I haven't ridden one yet, but the reviews I have read all state that it's a great option for folks who have never ridden but a bad option for those who ride. Two wheels don't translate into the Can-Am's three wheels. They are different. This option from HD would be a better compromise because more of the skill-sets we take from two wheels would translate. A Buell version would be bitchin'! |
Froggy
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 07:44 pm: |
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Give it 3 wheel drive and i will take mine in hero blue |
Danger_dave
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 10:03 pm: |
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>>Motorcyclist magazine really panned the Can-Am in the latest issue.<< What do they know - they quote me! It's not a motorcycle. Period. But it's some of the best fun I've ever had ON a vehicle. |
Danger_dave
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 10:05 pm: |
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Kiwi Rider says: ‘What’s it like?’ That’s the question most asked about the Can-Am Spyder. It would be Big Dave style to insert an analogy right here: ‘The Spyder is a lot like a…’, but, I…cant. The Syder is a lot like…a Spyder. Unique. One of the lads pointed out that the 2 up front, one aft, configuration has been done before on a Goggomobile and a Morgan, but this is the first true high performance incarnation we’ve encountered. The best I can do analogy-wise is take a Snowmobile and replace the belt and skis with wheels. Or A Ski-doo and add wheels. Not surprisingly the manufacturer has a history of making exactly these products. Add some pretty impressive traction and stability functions - plus fabulous suspension and you are almost there, but the Spyder has utility value as a bona fide road going vehicle. It isn’t a motorcycle, but you can use it like one. It’s not a car either, but you can use it like a motorcycle. At the heart of the machine is a 998cc EFI, DOHC V-twin Rotax engine with a bore and stroke of 97mm x 68mm. The engine puts out 106hp @ 8,500r[m and 77ft lbs of torque at 6250rpm. When you consider these numbers against a dry weight of 316kg you appreciate the machine has some real chutzpah. For comparison’s sake the recently tested - and most impressive - Suzuki C109R tips the scales at 357kg. The demo unit is fitted with a race pipe and is one of the sweetest sounding vehicles ever. Honey. Power is delivered to the real wheel via a slick 5 a speed gearbox that also incorporates a ‘genuine’ reverse gear. Pull the lever on the handlebar and kick down twice and the warning lights flash and it all goes backwards smoother than a Maxwell Smart comedy clip. Final drive is by clean and tidy belt. The motor is slung low in a steel spine frame that utilises ‘sports car’ Double ‘A Arm’ suspension up front while the ‘motorcycle’ rear features a mono shock adjustable for pre-load and damping. I thought the suspension was simply brilliant. It soaked up everything I hit and didn’t deviate at all. Watching it all work from the rider’s perch is a treat too. To keep the power and torque under control in this stumpy triangulation, the Spyder uses 4 ECUs or as their promo materials call them, ‘Brains’. One Brain controls The Vehicle Stability System - VSS. The VSS is comprised of a Stability Control System, Traction Control System and the ABS. The Stability control ‘constantly analyses motion and forces as they relate to the vehicle and will intervene to help maintain control in an emergency situation’. Same with the ABS. The traction control system also helps keep the vehicle on its intended trajectory. I didn’t find any of the systems obtrusive or notice any impact on the ride other than the traction control making the engine stutter once or twice – and I rode it through some diabolical ‘weather bomb’ conditions. No doubt it was keeping me on line, and it was reassuring to know it was all working on my behalf as I ploughed through the storm debris over Woodcocks Hill. The next Brain controls the Dynamic Power Steering. Variable boost is optimized for current speed, torque and load. The steering is precise and direct. Amazingly, grin enticingly, direct. Every corner is an adventure. Brain 3 controls the EFI and Number 4 does security duty. The whole thing works marvelously. The guys at BRP warned me – as a motorcyclist, DO NOT judge this machine in the first half an hour. Actually I spent the first tank of gas fighting the machine. It took me 180km to find the mojo. (180 was typical range. It varied depending on how hard I pushed the machine) People who are exclusively car drivers won’t have the same sort of adjustment issues to the ‘Y’ as a full time motorcycle rider. For the first little while it’s a motorcyclist brain-fart. Subsequently the paperwork, indemnities and acknowledgements that had to be signed before I could ride away were quite extensive. This is not a motorcycle – 2 tick boxes. This vehicle is wider than a motorcycle – 2 tick boxes. Etc etc. This is not an easy vehicle to get the hang of. Even after all that tick boxing I had a few ‘Oooh – hang on here’ moments. It works much more like an open wheel sports car than a motorcycle. When you get your head around that, and start hanging the opposite knee out and push down on the ‘wrong’ peg, my goodness, open road motoring becomes intoxicatingly exhilarating. I enjoyed the challenge of it from the start, but seriously – when the penny drops this is a huge, huge, buzz. The inertias and G forces it generates had the Co-pilot cracking up. It’s a roller coaster, merry-go-round and the dodgem cars (with 106 ponies) all at once. Hey! There’s the analogy I was looking for! Stopping the Spyder is taken care of by a foot actuated, 3-wheel braking system. The front has four pots on each wheel and the rear is a single pot controlled by an Electronic Distribution System. It also has a foot operated parking brake. I didn’t mind the foot brake system. The sort of angles and body positions that spirited riding produces make it a better option than a hand lever. Ride it far enough and you’ll see what I mean. I encountered really heavy rain, winds, and storms over the test period. Once I was attuned to the riding style I covered Woodcocks, Twilight Road and Monument Hill more comfortably and at the same (if not better) speeds than I would have done on my motorcycle. Not that I was reckless with a vehicle that costs $29,990+ at all, but with twice the tyre footprint up front, one that cant fall over, or slip out from under you, or tuck – these are wonderful confidence boosters. In fact it turned miserable conditions into a real blast and when I did get it out in good conditions it was even better. The traction control doesn’t stop you rarking up the back wheel up on exits in the wet either. It only comes into play when there is a risk of ‘tippage’. I found the comforts and ergonomics very Big Man friendly. Co-pilot also rated comfort as outstanding. The instruments are excellent, the lights are numerous and very bright, the mirrors are good. Around town it’s an absolute hoot too. Lining up in traffic like a car is a bit of a pain, but the celebrity the vehicle generates suited the shy and retiring BD psyche perfectly. It drew a crowd everywhere I stopped…actually, even as I rode past. I was photographed by drivers, passengers, and pedestrians - on every run. One guy in a Merc was hanging his iPhone out of the Sun-roof snapping shots as he tagged me along Fanshaw street. Then he mouthed ‘WTH is that?’ I pointed at the Kiwi Rider Sticker and replies: ‘$10.’ What it is…is a Spyder. It’s not a motorcycle, but it fits in hallowed pages of Kiwi Rider Magazine because you do indeed ride it. It’s category lies somewhere in the space between a car and a bike. Interestingly, when we picked up the demo unit it required a full bike licence to operate. In time it was in KR possession the approval came through to operate it on a car licence. It’s a viable vehicle for city use, town crossing and the 44 litre boot has utility value. The technology to make it all work as well as it does is simply stunning. It’s a great looking ‘celebrity’ wow vehicle that brings a smile to the dial of most people who encounter it. Open road and recreational motoring is indeed exhilarating, immersive, unique and an enormous amount of fun. That, apart from the roller coaster and dodgem car thing, is exactly what it’s like...sort of. |
Danger_dave
| Posted on Friday, September 19, 2008 - 10:28 pm: |
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That's just my draft - spotted several typos and bad ' - just imagine them fixed please - wot editors iz four :-) |
Cyclonedon
| Posted on Saturday, September 20, 2008 - 01:46 am: |
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there is a guy that goes to dealer that I visit and he bought a Spyder and loves it! Since he purchased it, he doesn't ride his Ultra Glide anymore. I test rode the Spyder last year and think it might be the way to go when I get older, but for now I'll just stick with my Uly! |
California
| Posted on Saturday, September 20, 2008 - 09:58 pm: |
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If you think that's hot, take a look at this video..... WOOOOOOO-hooooooo http://www.trirodmotorcycles.com/motorcycles/adren aline_video.html |
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