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OT - BMW RS100
G'day,
I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. Regards, Mac |
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 10:57:33 +0930, wrote:
G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. Regards, Mac Ive got a R90/6, '75 model. It has 187,000 miles on it. The clunk is pretty common for Beamers. Its the nature of the beast and may not be final drive wear, particularly with that few miles on it. At 56,000 unless the previous owner was a kid knee dragger (unlikely with that particular ride), its just broke in. http://www.advrider.com/forums/showp...72&postcount=5 Just be aware..that older Boxer rear brakes are....a bit...inadequate, if you have the rear drum. http://www.netbikes.com.au/roadtests/BMWR100RS.htm Put it up on the centerstand, pull the rear wheel and check the final drive "lovejoy" couplers. The gizmo that connects the rear wheel and the final drive. They are replaceable, but spendy if they are badly worn, which they shouldnt be at that mileage. YMMV Also drive shaft spline, when you have the time. http://www.webbikeworld.com/t2/spline/ You will want to either bookmark or print out this site http://www.ibmwr.org/otech/partsubs.html http://www.buchanan1.net/charge.shtml http://www.buchanan1.net/relay.shtml Also, check the 'gaiters" on the front forks. If they are cracked or broken, they WILL need to be replaced. (gaiters are the accordian rubber tubing covering the front fork sliding sections. Oh..the boxers of that vintage have a surprising amount of kneel..when you cram on the front brakes, they tend to lean far forwards..makes you feel like you are about to do a summersault. But if the previous owner put Bembo brakes on it, he may have modified the suspension. Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
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In article , Gunner says...
Put it up on the centerstand, pull the rear wheel and check the final drive "lovejoy" couplers. The gizmo that connects the rear wheel and the final drive. They are replaceable, but spendy if they are badly worn, which they shouldnt be at that mileage. YMMV Agreed - about the idea they're probably not badly worn at 50-something. But harder to replace than you think, it means a new spline coupling on the wheel, *and* either a new ring gear (the male spline on that is integral) or a re-work of the existing worn spline. Some folks glop braze on the worn spline, and then remachine the splines. THis supposedly gives 75% wear life from that point on, compared with the original. I'm not sure I believe that. My R75/6 is high miles and has a fairly worn rear drive coupling. When it gets critical I plan on begging the wire EDM guy here at work to make me a new male spline out of steel, and then machining the old one off, and silver-soldering the replacement on. Also, check the 'gaiters" on the front forks. If they are cracked or broken, they WILL need to be replaced. (gaiters are the accordian rubber tubing covering the front fork sliding sections. A bike of this vintage probably has no gaiters. If he buys it I would suggest he fit them. Oh..the boxers of that vintage have a surprising amount of kneel..when you cram on the front brakes, they tend to lean far forwards..makes you feel like you are about to do a summersault. But if the previous owner put Bembo brakes on it, he may have modified the suspension. This is the 'gummikahw' effect. g Fitting slightly heavier (7wt) fork oil, and a set of progressive springs, will help on this one. The real trick is a fork brace, this makes an amazing improvement. Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug You can put a Dyna III in there, but if you want my personal advice - leave the points. Jim '59 R50 (ready for powder coating) '60 R60US '75 R75/6 '78 R100RS -recent addition, has 'S' fairing newly fitted -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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Thanks again for the info, as you see from previous post, I bought it.
It does have the fork brace. I'll generally be riding it on open road and am a fairly sedate rider, but you never know, have been known to get a rush of blood to the head! :-) See ya Mac. On 13 Apr 2005 05:50:44 -0700, jim rozen wrote: In article , Gunner says... Put it up on the centerstand, pull the rear wheel and check the final drive "lovejoy" couplers. The gizmo that connects the rear wheel and the final drive. They are replaceable, but spendy if they are badly worn, which they shouldnt be at that mileage. YMMV Agreed - about the idea they're probably not badly worn at 50-something. But harder to replace than you think, it means a new spline coupling on the wheel, *and* either a new ring gear (the male spline on that is integral) or a re-work of the existing worn spline. Some folks glop braze on the worn spline, and then remachine the splines. THis supposedly gives 75% wear life from that point on, compared with the original. I'm not sure I believe that. My R75/6 is high miles and has a fairly worn rear drive coupling. When it gets critical I plan on begging the wire EDM guy here at work to make me a new male spline out of steel, and then machining the old one off, and silver-soldering the replacement on. Also, check the 'gaiters" on the front forks. If they are cracked or broken, they WILL need to be replaced. (gaiters are the accordian rubber tubing covering the front fork sliding sections. A bike of this vintage probably has no gaiters. If he buys it I would suggest he fit them. Oh..the boxers of that vintage have a surprising amount of kneel..when you cram on the front brakes, they tend to lean far forwards..makes you feel like you are about to do a summersault. But if the previous owner put Bembo brakes on it, he may have modified the suspension. This is the 'gummikahw' effect. g Fitting slightly heavier (7wt) fork oil, and a set of progressive springs, will help on this one. The real trick is a fork brace, this makes an amazing improvement. Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug You can put a Dyna III in there, but if you want my personal advice - leave the points. Jim '59 R50 (ready for powder coating) '60 R60US '75 R75/6 '78 R100RS -recent addition, has 'S' fairing newly fitted |
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On 13 Apr 2005 05:50:44 -0700, jim rozen
wrote: Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug You can put a Dyna III in there, but if you want my personal advice - leave the points. Jim Whats the up and down sides of sticking in a pointless G ignition? Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
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In article , Gunner says...
Whats the up and down sides of sticking in a pointless G ignition? First off you don't get them for free, I think a dyna 3 is a few hundred dollars. I have a points ignition in my R75, and the new bike had that same setup but was retrofitted by the previous owner with the dyna 3. When he did it, he hooked the electronics box up wrong to the coils, but it did still run fine. Comparison shows that both points and the electronic ignition do indeed provide satisfactory spark to run the bike. Granted I've removed the stock BMW wires and resistor plug caps on them, and replaced with straight copper 8mm silicone rubber wires from Taylor Vertex. So the resistor issue is moot. The think I like about the points is they seem to not require adjustment on that bike hardly at all. I haven't had the front cover off the R75 in about two years, so there's not a lot of tinkering required. The Dnya 3 uses the stock mechanical ignition advance unit, so whatever unreliability is inherent in that, is still present. And the dnya trigger unit that attaches to the cam seems a bit fidgity, though I've had no troubles with it. Likewise the circuit boards that hold the pickups seem kinda fragile. The one upside with the Dyna is, I think you can individually move the pickups to get the spark spot on on both jugs. But then, my R75 never had the 'split timing marks' problem. I think for me the biggest worry is that if something goes wrong inside the potted electronics unit, it's a drop-dead, walk home failure. With points, you can always manage to get 'em working somehow. Of course I carry spare points and condenser in the older bike's toolkit. I know that folks say that electronic parts are so much more reliable than mechanical ones - but this is a vehicle, and the parts are a) built to a price, using b) consumer grade parts, and d) subjected to extremes of temperature and vibration. I'm either going to start carrying an entire spare dyna unit, or swap back to points on the newer bike. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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On 13 Apr 2005 10:13:01 -0700, jim rozen
wrote: In article , Gunner says... Whats the up and down sides of sticking in a pointless G ignition? First off you don't get them for free, I think a dyna 3 is a few hundred dollars. I have a points ignition in my R75, and the new bike had that same setup but was retrofitted by the previous owner with the dyna 3. When he did it, he hooked the electronics box up wrong to the coils, but it did still run fine. Comparison shows that both points and the electronic ignition do indeed provide satisfactory spark to run the bike. Granted I've removed the stock BMW wires and resistor plug caps on them, and replaced with straight copper 8mm silicone rubber wires from Taylor Vertex. So the resistor issue is moot. The think I like about the points is they seem to not require adjustment on that bike hardly at all. I haven't had the front cover off the R75 in about two years, so there's not a lot of tinkering required. The Dnya 3 uses the stock mechanical ignition advance unit, so whatever unreliability is inherent in that, is still present. And the dnya trigger unit that attaches to the cam seems a bit fidgity, though I've had no troubles with it. Likewise the circuit boards that hold the pickups seem kinda fragile. The one upside with the Dyna is, I think you can individually move the pickups to get the spark spot on on both jugs. But then, my R75 never had the 'split timing marks' problem. I think for me the biggest worry is that if something goes wrong inside the potted electronics unit, it's a drop-dead, walk home failure. With points, you can always manage to get 'em working somehow. Of course I carry spare points and condenser in the older bike's toolkit. I know that folks say that electronic parts are so much more reliable than mechanical ones - but this is a vehicle, and the parts are a) built to a price, using b) consumer grade parts, and d) subjected to extremes of temperature and vibration. I'm either going to start carrying an entire spare dyna unit, or swap back to points on the newer bike. Jim Good post, and food for thought. Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
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jim rozen wrote:
(snip) You can put a Dyna III in there, but if you want my personal advice - leave the points. Jim '59 R50 (ready for powder coating) '60 R60US '75 R75/6 '78 R100RS -recent addition, has 'S' fairing newly fitted I've been considering the Dyna III for my '76 R90/6, why do you recommend leaving the points? David |
#9
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In article , David R. Birch says...
I've been considering the Dyna III for my '76 R90/6, why do you recommend leaving the points? From my previous post, here's my thoughts: (quote) =============================================== Whats the up and down sides of sticking in a pointless G ignition? First off you don't get them for free, I think a dyna 3 is a few hundred dollars. I have a points ignition in my R75, and the new bike had that same setup but was retrofitted by the previous owner with the dyna 3. When he did it, he hooked the electronics box up wrong to the coils, but it did still run fine. Comparison shows that both points and the electronic ignition do indeed provide satisfactory spark to run the bike. Granted I've removed the stock BMW wires and resistor plug caps on them, and replaced with straight copper 8mm silicone rubber wires from Taylor Vertex. So the resistor issue is moot. The think I like about the points is they seem to not require adjustment on that bike hardly at all. I haven't had the front cover off the R75 in about two years, so there's not a lot of tinkering required. The Dnya 3 uses the stock mechanical ignition advance unit, so whatever unreliability is inherent in that, is still present. And the dnya trigger unit that attaches to the cam seems a bit fidgity, though I've had no troubles with it. Likewise the circuit boards that hold the pickups seem kinda fragile. The one upside with the Dyna is, I think you can individually move the pickups to get the spark spot on on both jugs. But then, my R75 never had the 'split timing marks' problem. I think for me the biggest worry is that if something goes wrong inside the potted electronics unit, it's a drop-dead, walk home failure. With points, you can always manage to get 'em working somehow. Of course I carry spare points and condenser in the older bike's toolkit. I know that folks say that electronic parts are so much more reliable than mechanical ones - but this is a vehicle, and the parts are a) built to a price, using b) consumer grade parts, and d) subjected to extremes of temperature and vibration. I'm either going to start carrying an entire spare dyna unit, or swap back to points on the newer bike. ================================================== ================= (endquote) Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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Mac,
Has anyone advised you to lubricate the splines on the rear drive unit? I had a 1974R75/6, which has the same final drive setup. I used a concoction of anti-sieze and grease, about 50/50, and brushed it in there with a small acid brush. Then whenever you change the rear tire, clean that out and re-lube it. It requires several hundred dollars to have the splines replaced. Grease is much cheaper. Also, the transmission input shaft should also be lubricated anually, where the clutch disc slides back and forth, same lube, same way, you have to seperate the tranny from the engine, takes about an hour, after you have done it a time or two. You also have to remove the swing arm pivots to get the trans back, this is a good time to check the lube there, too. I am on my second airhead, R100RT, 1991. Has better power for two-up riding than the R75 had. I have a single-side swingarm now, and no splines in the final drive/tire connection. I also vote for keeping the points. They might require attention once a year, but if say, a hi-energy-impulse nuclear device is detonated within a few hundred miles, you might have the only vehicle running in your area. I have replaced both seats on my beemers with Corbin seats, and am glad I did. It is well worth the investment. Watch out for shorting the diode board, they are pricey, but if you know a radio Dr., diodes are really cheap. The trannys are notoriously clunky, so that is most likely the clunk you mentioned. It is cheap insurance to drain all fluids yearly, and replace with good quality lubricants. It only takes 2 quarts of oil to change it, so don't be a piker, change it when it starts getting easy to see on the dipstick. Oil filter, once a year. Join the BMWMOA you wil find it worth the price. Happy motoring!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Sid, near Niagara Falls |
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Thanks Gunner and Vaughan, (only replies I've seen so far) Gunner,
those sites were exactly the sort of thing I need. Had heaps of bikes but know bugger all about BMs. I bought the bike. Rear disk. Bit rough appearance wise but seems mechanically sound. The mechanic that put me on to it knew the bike and told me it was good. The ex-owner seemed like a straight shooter. Has the two panniers and top box. Stainless exhaust. Always wanted a BMW. Paid $Aus4000, which seemed quite reasonable after checking mags etc. I like it! All in all, a good day. Thanks again. Some blokes, when having a mid life crisis get the blonde and Porsche, me, I get the bike and me knee fixed! :-) See ya, Mac. On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 06:51:53 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 10:57:33 +0930, wrote: G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. Regards, Mac Ive got a R90/6, '75 model. It has 187,000 miles on it. The clunk is pretty common for Beamers. Its the nature of the beast and may not be final drive wear, particularly with that few miles on it. At 56,000 unless the previous owner was a kid knee dragger (unlikely with that particular ride), its just broke in. http://www.advrider.com/forums/showp...72&postcount=5 Just be aware..that older Boxer rear brakes are....a bit...inadequate, if you have the rear drum. http://www.netbikes.com.au/roadtests/BMWR100RS.htm Put it up on the centerstand, pull the rear wheel and check the final drive "lovejoy" couplers. The gizmo that connects the rear wheel and the final drive. They are replaceable, but spendy if they are badly worn, which they shouldnt be at that mileage. YMMV Also drive shaft spline, when you have the time. http://www.webbikeworld.com/t2/spline/ You will want to either bookmark or print out this site http://www.ibmwr.org/otech/partsubs.html http://www.buchanan1.net/charge.shtml http://www.buchanan1.net/relay.shtml Also, check the 'gaiters" on the front forks. If they are cracked or broken, they WILL need to be replaced. (gaiters are the accordian rubber tubing covering the front fork sliding sections. Oh..the boxers of that vintage have a surprising amount of kneel..when you cram on the front brakes, they tend to lean far forwards..makes you feel like you are about to do a summersault. But if the previous owner put Bembo brakes on it, he may have modified the suspension. Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 22:37:38 +0930, wrote:
Thanks Gunner and Vaughan, (only replies I've seen so far) Gunner, those sites were exactly the sort of thing I need. Had heaps of bikes but know bugger all about BMs. I bought the bike. Rear disk. Bit rough appearance wise but seems mechanically sound. The mechanic that put me on to it knew the bike and told me it was good. The ex-owner seemed like a straight shooter. Has the two panniers and top box. Stainless exhaust. Always wanted a BMW. Paid $Aus4000, which seemed quite reasonable after checking mags etc. I like it! All in all, a good day. Thanks again. Some blokes, when having a mid life crisis get the blonde and Porsche, me, I get the bike and me knee fixed! :-) See ya, Mac. Boxers..and boxer owners tend to be something of an unusual bunch. You have the snooty techno riders, who have to have the latest and greatest high tech ****, expensive custom leathers and look like something out of the 22nd century. Then you have the rest of us. Personally, I like SOME boxers (not K bikes) simply because they are dependable rides that are comfortable over long distances. Wash and detail one? Thats what putty knives are for, once a year, if you cant see the headlight anymore. Or if you got coyote/rabbit guts deeply into the cooling fins of the head(s) and the smell makes you hungry. I actually had ants swarming my bike once. But that was cool as they only ate the rabbit guts. Saved me from having to use a pressure washer to get Thumper off the engine. Beemers make great rat bikes. Though they do tend to be tough on rear tires as they seem to wear faster than on any other bike Ive owned. Oh..and clutch lever adjustment...something Jim might give you a heads up on G Gunner On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 06:51:53 GMT, Gunner wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 10:57:33 +0930, wrote: G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. Regards, Mac Ive got a R90/6, '75 model. It has 187,000 miles on it. The clunk is pretty common for Beamers. Its the nature of the beast and may not be final drive wear, particularly with that few miles on it. At 56,000 unless the previous owner was a kid knee dragger (unlikely with that particular ride), its just broke in. http://www.advrider.com/forums/showp...72&postcount=5 Just be aware..that older Boxer rear brakes are....a bit...inadequate, if you have the rear drum. http://www.netbikes.com.au/roadtests/BMWR100RS.htm Put it up on the centerstand, pull the rear wheel and check the final drive "lovejoy" couplers. The gizmo that connects the rear wheel and the final drive. They are replaceable, but spendy if they are badly worn, which they shouldnt be at that mileage. YMMV Also drive shaft spline, when you have the time. http://www.webbikeworld.com/t2/spline/ You will want to either bookmark or print out this site http://www.ibmwr.org/otech/partsubs.html http://www.buchanan1.net/charge.shtml http://www.buchanan1.net/relay.shtml Also, check the 'gaiters" on the front forks. If they are cracked or broken, they WILL need to be replaced. (gaiters are the accordian rubber tubing covering the front fork sliding sections. Oh..the boxers of that vintage have a surprising amount of kneel..when you cram on the front brakes, they tend to lean far forwards..makes you feel like you are about to do a summersault. But if the previous owner put Bembo brakes on it, he may have modified the suspension. Good bikes. Ive not had mine on the road since 98. No time, no money. But I fire it up every 6 months and run it till it warms up, and change the oil once a year. Someday when Im rich and famous, Ill change out the point style ignition and put in an electronic one. Shrug Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
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wrote in message ... G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Can't tell you anything about the RS 100 but... When I got out of the Navy, I bought a used 1965 R60 from a BMW dealer. He said it would be the last motorcycle I would ever really need. 35 years later, I still have it. Vaughn |
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In article , Dave Hinz says...
Ask specifically about carb synchronization if this is the 1000cc boxer engine with bing carbs that I'm thinking. If the owner gives you a vacant stare, then be aware that it's probably not performing up to potential. Unless it changed dramatically between '77 and '82 (I have no idea, sorry), Not really. The bing cv's are actually pretty easy to synch, and they hold their settings for a long time. The only major known carb bug is a) the CV diaphragms hole after many years (easy fix) and b) if there's no filter upstream of each carb, the float needle will hang open and give one gasoline-soaked footwear. Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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On 13 Apr 2005 08:31:26 -0700, jim rozen wrote:
In article , Dave Hinz says... Ask specifically about carb synchronization if this is the 1000cc boxer engine with bing carbs that I'm thinking. If the owner gives you a vacant stare, then be aware that it's probably not performing up to potential. Unless it changed dramatically between '77 and '82 (I have no idea, sorry), Not really. The bing cv's are actually pretty easy to synch, and they hold their settings for a long time. Well, that's what I'm saying. If they haven't done it, then there is a huge potential for vast improvements in performance by doing it. If they answer "Yeah, it's a snap, buy a polysynch if you don't have one", then that tells you more about the seller and how they may have kept the bike up. Maybe the one I bought was more fscked up than normal, but they were _way_ out of tune with each other when I got it. Then again, the clutch was out of adjustment (no free play - 30 second fix), the oil was chunky, the voltage regulator was shot, and one fork was nearly dry. Guy figured the bike was ready to part out, when it just needed about an hour of attention (and a voltage regulator from one of my parts Saabs). Dave Hinz |
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In article , Dave Hinz says...
Well, that's what I'm saying. If they haven't done it, then there is a huge potential for vast improvements in performance by doing it. If they answer "Yeah, it's a snap, buy a polysynch if you don't have one", then that tells you more about the seller and how they may have kept the bike up. I like to just short first one, and then the other, plug to ground. If the sync is right the idle will not change speed at all when this is done. I've found that setting the idle air screw on those carbs seems to be done best with *both* carbs running, unlike the bikes I have with direct slide carbs. Maybe the one I bought was more fscked up than normal, but they were _way_ out of tune with each other when I got it. Then again, the clutch was out of adjustment (no free play - 30 second fix), the oil was chunky, the voltage regulator was shot, and one fork was nearly dry. Guy figured the bike was ready to part out, when it just needed about an hour of attention (and a voltage regulator from one of my parts Saabs). Those are good buys - the bike I bought had the headlight installed upside down. The seller made the comment "I don't like those H4 headlights very much, they don't seem to work very well...." Jim -- ================================================== please reply to: JRR(zero) at pkmfgvm4 (dot) vnet (dot) ibm (dot) com ================================================== |
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On 13 Apr 2005 12:23:26 -0700, jim rozen wrote:
In article , Dave Hinz says... Maybe the one I bought was more fscked up than normal, but they were _way_ out of tune with each other when I got it. Then again, the clutch was out of adjustment (no free play - 30 second fix), the oil was chunky, the voltage regulator was shot, and one fork was nearly dry. Guy figured the bike was ready to part out, when it just needed about an hour of attention (and a voltage regulator from one of my parts Saabs). Those are good buys - the bike I bought had the headlight installed upside down. The seller made the comment "I don't like those H4 headlights very much, they don't seem to work very well...." Yeeeahhhhh...I can see how an H4 upside-down would be unpleasant. For him, _and_ for passing airplanes. The one I bought was from a cow-orker, so I couldn't gloat _too_ much about it. I just told him that I spent some quality time with the bike for a week. Didn't mention that it totalled a couple hours. He also didn't know about the hinged oil filter, so the fairing was making oil changes a major ordeal. Wasn't a mechanic type guy. Good at tuning MRI scanners, though... Dave Hinz |
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G'day,
Thanks Dave, the ex-owner volunteered information about the carbys, said easiest way to check was to run on stand to about 3000rpm, pull a plug lead, note rpm drop, replace, pull other plug lead and compare rpm drop and should give indication of how carbies performing. Sounds sort of logical and this bloke maintained it pretty well. Bit like mag check on a/c! Regards, Mac On 13 Apr 2005 15:16:03 GMT, Dave Hinz wrote: On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 10:57:33 +0930, wrote: G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? My '77 BMW R100/7 had that clunk. I'm not aware that it was a problem, just "one of those things". Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Ask specifically about carb synchronization if this is the 1000cc boxer engine with bing carbs that I'm thinking. If the owner gives you a vacant stare, then be aware that it's probably not performing up to potential. Unless it changed dramatically between '77 and '82 (I have no idea, sorry), there's not a lot to go wrong. Bosch electricals common to any european car of the era, and so on. Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. It's well built and designed. I didn't have much experience fixing mine because it didn't break. Dave Hinz |
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Further to my previous post, I delved into the archives and found I
have a scan of the workshop manual. Drop me a note (remove the obvious spamtrap) if you (or anyone else) wants it. To big to email - it will have to be on CD. Geoff |
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G'day,
Thanks for the offer Geoff, but the previous owner threw in a Haynes manual which looks like it'll do the job. Got the bike home today, first time on one this size in bloody traffic for about 16 yrs! Made it in one piece and will continue to do so, hopefully. Thanks again for the offer, Regards, Mac. On 15 Apr 2005 00:40:02 -0500, geoff m wrote: Further to my previous post, I delved into the archives and found I have a scan of the workshop manual. Drop me a note (remove the obvious spamtrap) if you (or anyone else) wants it. To big to email - it will have to be on CD. Geoff |
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On Wed, 13 Apr 2005 10:57:33 +0930, wrote:
G'day, I'll be looking at a BMW RS100 this pm, possibly buy. Has 94000ks (about 56500 miles). 1982. Some wear in final drive, 'clunk' when taking off from standstilll. Fairly common I think? Anybody had/own one of these? Anything I should look for in particular? Any traps? Have had bikes before but this will be the first BMW. Has Brembo brakes and ss exhaust. Tia for any comments. Regards, Mac I haven't had much to do with the Airhead beemers - I have a K100RS (inline flat 4) The Internet has lots of resources for them. There are also a lot of places selling parts online. I have found www.siebenrock.de and www.motobins.co.uk to be good. They are generally 30% cheaper than here (New Zealand) and delivery is much the same as getting parts through the official channels from BMW. One example - fork stanchion (gen BMW) for my K - 179euro from Siebenrock, 440euro from BMW NZ and would have to be ordered in - same part, both brand new. What is the value in local support there with that markup? may be of use: http://www.xmission.com/~wendell/GS/ (although for a later model than yours) http://www.ascycles.com/illustrated_...alog_main.aspx parts fiche for most BMWs http://www.indian.no/ /90 models http://www.realoem.com/bmw/ another parts fiche (incld cars) Discount Motorcycle Wreckers, 35 Dawson St, North Coburg, Melbourne, Phone 03 9350 4417 specialise in wrecking BMWs Geoff |
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