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CVO Technical => General CVO discussion => Topic started by: FELIX on June 23, 2021, 03:18:23 AM

Title: RDRS - traction control
Post by: FELIX on June 23, 2021, 03:18:23 AM
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: spence on June 23, 2021, 06:09:05 AM
I used the rain mode last year once and didnt like it and too be honest until your post I had forgotten the RDRS was even a thing, that should tell you my opinion on it ha
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: Glenncarp on June 24, 2021, 09:59:34 AM
I used the rain mode last year once and didn't like it and too be honest until your post I had forgotten the RDRS was even a thing, that should tell you my opinion on it ha

The art is of riding is just that...an art. If I needed help on riding a motorcycle, I would buy a trike. Just my 2 cents, this was an HD gimmick to get millennials to buy bikes. It failed miserably.

To me, looking through the turn, getting right lean angle, peeking at road in corner to identify any loose road conditions and adjusting the bike on my own is all part of the hype of riding the twisties.
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: FELIX on June 24, 2021, 10:52:58 AM
Do you turn it off everytime you start the bike?  It seems to auto start.
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: CVODON on June 25, 2021, 06:42:12 PM
I have only ridden one HD with the RDRS and it was raining and I thought it was great. Bike took off hard from stops and never tried to slip, pretty much like a car with traction control.
But to each his own, I wouldn't buy a new bike without anti-lok and RDRS no matter the brand.
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: mark on June 25, 2021, 08:32:42 PM
The art is of riding is just that...an art. If I needed help on riding a motorcycle, I would buy a trike. Just my 2 cents, this was an HD gimmick to get millennials to buy bikes. It failed miserably.

To me, looking through the turn, getting right lean angle, peeking at road in corner to identify any loose road conditions and adjusting the bike on my own is all part of the hype of riding the twisties.
Sorry, but I’ve never met anyone that could ride a bike, lose traction, and respond to that traction loss as fast as a computer.  It’s physically impossible. Flying a fighter plane is an art, but I doubt any F-18 pilots are clamoring for WWII technology.     
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: CVO To Go on June 26, 2021, 08:33:57 AM
As a retired aircraft mechanic, I've been around a lot of pilots, both military and civilian and one thing many have said is they miss that "seat of the pants" feeling on aircraft that were less complex. 

Dave
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: ultra13 on June 27, 2021, 11:40:20 AM
CVO To Go.......What type of airframe did you work on??
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: Pan1 on June 27, 2021, 11:21:25 PM
I am not an RDS expert but unless I turn off the traction control,  on aggressive ( not speed shifting) 1-2 and 2-3 shifts the computer pulls a lot of power out of the bike and there is significant throttle lag.
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: kojak on June 28, 2021, 05:44:14 AM
I am not an RDS expert but unless I turn off the traction control,  on aggressive ( not speed shifting) 1-2 and 2-3 shifts the computer pulls a lot of power out of the bike and there is significant throttle lag.
Not my experience at all.
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: CVO To Go on June 28, 2021, 11:35:09 AM
CVO To Go.......What type of airframe did you work on??

I was a crew chief in the Air Force and worked on F-4's.  As a civilian I worked as a general in line maintenance with AA and on almost all the aircraft type in the fleet before I retired.

Dave
Title: Re: RDRS - traction control
Post by: ultra13 on June 29, 2021, 09:06:03 AM
CVO To Go I was an A-7 and F-16 crew chief. 38 yrs in the AF....
Love the Jets!..Miss'em...