bergmen
Well-known member
Throttle off at any speed, change D-mode at will. If the throttle is on at all it will ignore the attempt and keep it in the current mode. I've done it a thousand+ times already.
Dan
Dan
I stand corrected. Its 0 throttle input and it changes.My 2014 does not.My 2014 has to be in neutral to change modes.
Used S-mode over the weekend. Did not crash nor burst into flames. The motorbike changed modes on the roll without pulling in the clutch lever.
For those who believe S-mode is required for commuting -- like, maybe ionbeam -- ......... well, ...... I actually have nothing to say because I, too, have commuted in metro Boston at rush hour. Those people are crazy.
It would be cool if someone on a Gen3 took it to the track, then punched it from Tour to Sport when leaned over on the gas in a tight right hander, then tell us what happens!!It's a lawyer who made that rule. Imagine a **** on his new fjr (no one from here of course) who switches from T to S without moving the throttle and the resulting surge of power runs him into the truck he was following too close.
Now, is this possible, I don't know.
But,
Most rules or recommendations exist because of something stupid someone once did. And if it ever happened anywhere and Yamaha knew about it and didn't warn us all about it, we'll, you know the rest.
While I usually run the twisties in T-Mode at high revs, because of Alan's statement I put it in S-mode for the slab back from Hooterville on Sunday. He is exactly right...S-Mode for commuting it is...or high density slab work.^^^^^^ Funny how that works.
If I tried to commute in the T mode I'd be dead within 2 miles of work. When I need to go, I need to go (!), none of this throttle nanny telling me NO when a Peterbilt is trying to run me down or I need to accelerate into a hole in the traffic.
Sorry Craig, I can't ride that fast.S mode in the twisties in no problem at all for some of us wheatie Just ride like I do
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