Movie buffs may flock to Sundance for the film festival and antique auto enthusiasts throng the Monterey peninsula for the annual classic car show, but nothing compares in scale or commotion to the mass of bikers who attend the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, the 72nd edition of which blasts off this year on August 6. Besides taking over five downtown blocks of the small (pop. 6,600) South Dakota town to display their machines, the more than half-a-million attendees will spend a week at shows and concerts, participate in organized rides and informal races, and hang out with their fellow bikers.
New this year at Sturgis -- and threatening to some of the attendees -- is the growing presence of motorcycles that have three wheels. More stable and easier to handle than traditional two-wheelers, they are catching on with riders who because of infirmity, inexperience, or age are unwilling or unable to throw their leg over the saddle of a regular motorcycle. Three-wheelers are becoming so popular they are generating some friction in the biker community. As Steven L. Thompson, a columnist for Cycle World, observed, "a lot of motorcyclists apparently think it's some kind of affront to motorcycling -- a slap in the face of "real" motorcyclists."
Harley-Davidson |
Harley Tri-Glide |
Can-Am Spyder |
Lehman Custom Trike |
The trike in Harley's 2012 lineup is the Tri Glide Ultra Classic, which it colorfully describes on its website as "the ultimate badass touring machine." The massive bike weights nearly 1,200 pounds and is rated for 80 pounds of cargo. But since it has three wheels, there is no need for the driver to balance all that weight when he makes traffic stops. The Tri Glide Ultra Classic starts at $30,499 and costs as much as a midsize car. Sales grew 11% in 2011 vs. 5% for two wheelers and are up another 27% this year, making the Tri Glide the sixth most popular Harley model.
Can-Am's three-wheeler has an entirely different DNA. Explains a spokesperson: "We saw an opportunity to go after the non-nons: People with no experience with motorcycles or power sports vehicles." Introduced in 2007, the two-plus-one design of the Spyder was so unusual that Jay Leno took delivery of the first one.
Spyder Roadster |
Although cries of "lose your training wheels" are still heard, longtime bikers are beginning to come around. There are thrills aplenty, no matter what you are driving. As Cycle World's Thompson points out, "Ride anything with two or three wheels into the world populated mainly by armored and air-bagged cages, and you ride naked, more or less. Be caught by a left-turning SUV, and it doesn't matter if you're on a Harley or a Spyder." In some ways, three-wheelers raise the adrenalin level even higher. New riders are warned to be careful when attempting to split lanes of traffic; maneuvering three tracks of tires rather one than shrinks the margin of safety rather drastically