Update to keep the thread alive and to report progress. I found
@Monk/Bob ’s report very reassuring that my own experiences were not just me, so hopefully an update every now and then - in real time - will be useful to later Newbies to the Spyder.
I have not done much riding yet… I won’t go out on it unless it is dry and not looking like rain. I will in the future, but not yet.
I have had 3 ‘long’ rides of about 80-90 miles on more or less the same route just getting used to the road camber and the bends. Each time was better than the last, each return journey was better than the outward journey. One day I varied it and took a longer route home on a twisty, undulating road that I liked to ride on the ST1300. One part of it in particular was playing in my mind. I’m in the UK, we ride on the left, and I have memories of riding with a sidecar. Left handers with an empty sidecar were nerve racking - too fast or too tight and the chair would lift, and the only way to correct was to steer into the oncoming traffic. Apparently I still have that memory, because the Spyder does not deal with left handers as well as it does with right handers!
So this was a left hand bend which starts to go steeply uphill part way round. The inside of the bend, left, is raised. Followed by a very steep short climb with a left hand curve to it, and a brow with an invisible right hander at the top. Invisible because you cannot see it until you get to the brow. On the solo bike, I’d start turning before I could see it.
So this was playing in my head, but I needed to see how it would behave and how I would cope. There are plenty of steep climbs through the Yorkshire Dales, some with tight, narrow hairpins. I have no intention of doing them yet, but I will want to be able to use those roads in the future.
A week earlier I had been talking to a friend who had just been skiing. I haven’t skied for 50 years, but I had done a fair bit in my youth. The conversation recovered long lost memories reminded me of parallel turns - keeping the skis parallel rather than the learner style snow plough turns. You press down on the outside ski - ie the right ski - in order to turn left. So I already know how to do this.
This was fresh in my head when I was riding this twisty windy road and I started doing it without thinking. Pressing down on my right ski/footboard when turning left. This was a revelation. It did a few things - kept me from being thrown to the right on left handers; it gave my foot a point of reference of where ‘level’ was, so the sensation of tipping over to the right was gone - my right foot was firmly planted on solid footboard and that was what my brain needed; it helped me to get the steering input right; I was already supporting my body on the outside leg for the turning forces.
So these twisty turns and this steep left hander that had been playing on my mind - I got to the top with absolutely no issues, and was wondering what all of the fuss had been about. In fact I was enjoying skiing through the twisties.
I did have a ‘moment’ at a sharp railway bridge later on. Two right angles left, then right. I slowed down a lot for the left, driving on the left, this is the tightest, but I failed to turn the bars enough for what the corner required and was drifting across to the other side, feeling unable to turn tighter for fear of ‘lifting the sidecar’ that is still in my head. The choice of hitting the bridge side and toppling onto the railway line, and risking turning tighter was a forced decision, which should not have needed thinking about. But I was on the wrong side of the road before I sorted myself out. And by now I needed to turn tighter still, which I did and the Spyder did it with absolutely no issue.
I really don’t know what happened there. I wasn’t going much more than fast walking pace - but I’ve noticed before, the start of taking a slow corner is much worse than speeding up and powering round it. My head is still the problem, but it is getting better.
The weather is improving. Plenty of time for more practice. It’ll be more fun soon.