(06-25-2022, 07:31 AM)ESquared Wrote: Hard to believe it's been a month since it all came together. Wondering how it's going with the new ride?
You know the phrase, "it was great while it lasted"?
A landscaping truck pulling a trailer had other ideas to that little slice of paradise I was enjoying. Put nearly 3K miles on in the first three weeks, with the accident happening on its 3 week birthday to me, almost to the hour. Scraped arm, two broken ribs, $9K in parts and $5K in labor later -- I am once again in the market for an RS.
Insurance has worked to compensate me quickly and I'm meeting with my loan officer this weekend to apply for another. The local dealer never cancelled my original order nor took my name off of it -- and that VIN got off the assembly line last week, was picked up by the shipping carrier a few days ago on its way to the Port of Berlin. I'm not obligated to purchase it though, and there's a brand new one just like it (but oddly, with the silver belly pan of the white model which I wouldn't want) at BMW of Chicago just waiting to be ridden home.
Leaning heavily towards just waiting but concerned about how long it'll take to get here. Fortunately it wouldn't be required to be shipped through California's docks but I'm thinking I still wouldn't see it until sometime in August. Headed to the dealer just after I click send on this message to possibly get more info. Something about it being built specifically for me, fresh out of the crate, with no other human having even sat on it after having left the factory has quite a strong appeal for no rational reason. And bikes aren't about reason, they're about what impassions us beyond it.
Short review of my experience of the RS:
Difficult to separate expectation from reality as I hadn't ridden in a while nor even bothered to test ride anything else to compare it to (my heart knew what it wanted). I'm a cynical jaded old F that is very hard to impress, but aside from carrying capacity of the OEM side bags (that shelf just kills so many possibilities for stuffing larger things in there) the bike exceeded even my elevated ones. I commuted with it every day rain or shine, up early to ride a long way to work and would go out right after dinner to ride until I was too tired or sore to continue safely.
Things impressed me with how much better they were than I expected
- torque!! (pulling away from a stop in 3rd must be what Grumpy's Tracer feels like in 1st)
- motor characteristics & fueling
- brightness & effectiveness of stock headlights (which put me off getting aux lights right away, which I feel contributed to my crash)
- usability of in-dash TFT navigation
Things I had expected to kick ass and do:
- HP & torque to weight ratio - pretty easily winning all my mini street duels so far, people seem to want to race it so it's a LOT of fun
- bike controls* & electronics (love the TFT)
- keyless ride experience
- Connected Ride app's ride logging
- @ 6'4" sport seat & stock pegs provide multiple (so far) comfortable ways to ride - need to test on trips
Things that didn't impress me
- Nav VI's glacial routing performance
- can only pair BMW comm systems to bike's TFT
- * conventional turn signal control (MUCH preferred old way with left & right buttons on left & right handlebars)
- poor balance of center stand (difficult to move off it when on bike)
- carrying capacity of side cases with the shelves in there
- sound at idle (sound with baffle open under hard acceleration was better than expected but still nowhere near great)
Things removed
- RS stickers from sides (personally I'm a fan of de-badging bikes & cars; the marque should be enough)
- stock seat
- stock windscreen (thought my helmet was faulty at first, but no, there's that much buffeting from the stock windscreen)
Things added since purchased
- sport seat
- OEM alarm (will wait to see how using up the sole spare rear subframe power outlet for this will affect future expandability)
- BMW Nav VI ($450 on Craigslist)
- BMW Connected Ride cradle (it arrived the week of the accident and I never got to use it)
- BMW luggage rack & rear case (fortunately not installed on totalled bike, will be transferred to new)
- BMW bag liners
- battery harness & wireless remote for heated gear
- MRA VarioTouring windscreen (had to buy this from Hornig in Germany and air ship it because out of stock everywhere else)
Mods planned for old & new bikes
- 2x Denali D3 & 2x Denali DM aux lights, plus some additional boosting of turn signals & brakes I haven't decided on yet
- Akrapovic Ti de-catted (but still including baffle) headers & exhaust (allowing what Euro 5 restricts)
- Stage 2 Brentune w/velocity stacks (telling Euro 5 to go F itself)
- switch to Dunlop Roadsmart 4 tires (too many glowing reviews not to)
New gear
- Aerostich R3 suit (barely used and not the colors I'd pick, but for $1K off and in my exact size I sort of had to)
- Arai Signet-X helmet w/Pro Shade system (PinLock 120 & Pro Shade = my new favorite helmet ever)
- Daytona Road Star GTX boots (worth the hype & cost? so far they're great, will take years to tell though)
- Gerbing 12V heated jacket liner & Vanguard heated gloves, with dual wireless-ready controller
- Gerbing wireless fairing-mounted controller
- Alpinestars SP-2 V2 gloves (gauntlet, can already tell their quality has gone downhill from a decade ago)
- Alpinestars SMX-1 Air V2 gloves (vented short)
- Klim balaclava (can't find the BMW balaclava anywhere in stock)
- Cardo Packtalk Edge (impressive volume, quality, noise suppression -- very nice so far)
- GS-911wifi (needed it within the first few days to reset the service reminder; dirt simple but IMO overpriced)
... well. Motorcycling is certainly a black hole of money. What am I gonna do, take it with me?
More to follow I'm sure...
Craig
'20 R1250RS
Previous: '21 R1250RS, '03 K1200RS, '01 R1100RS, '83 R800
'20 R1250RS
Previous: '21 R1250RS, '03 K1200RS, '01 R1100RS, '83 R800