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I just bought a friend's 2016 R1200RS when he moved to a GS. I haven't put many miles on it yet but planning a few longer trips this year. Most of my riding has been on a DR650 so this level of luxury is pretty wild.
I've also noticed it's very hard to ride any speed under about 58 mph.
Jamie
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Welcome to the Forum community!
I think you must be joking about being "... very hard to ride any speed under about 58 mph." Figured you must mean that it is difficult to keep the speed under 58 mph ....?
Regards,
Grumpy Goat
2016 BMW R1200RS
2023 Triumph Tiger 900 Rally Pro
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Welcome to the family from the capital district of New York State. BTW, it's not the bike that's going to get you a ticket ;-)
Be stubborn with your dream but flexible with your path. 20 R1250RS, 87 VFR400F Former bikes: 66 T120 Bonneville 650, 69 CB750, 73 CB350F, 83 VF750F, 84 VF1000F, 85 VF1000R, 07 VFR800, 10 GL1800, 16 Ducati Scrambler, 18 R1200RT.
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Welcome! Yeah, the BMW RS machine does like to go fast. Whatever you do, don't get rid of that DR650. My ol' riding buddy Ron has several bikes, including a R1200GS, a beautiful R850RT, and his DR650. He says that that he has the most fun on that little DR.
Seeya
ATB
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That is why the bike has cruise control. Need a radar detector too.
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You could try to sand it down to a fine sandpaper and then have a fine sandblast on the area (or the whole) finished off with quick flash of a propane torch before you buy new.
R&D department
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(04-30-2026, 08:21 AM)maxredline Wrote: You could try to sand it down to a fine sandpaper and then have a fine sandblast on the area (or the whole) finished off with quick flash of a propane torch before you buy new.
I agree with the repair option. This is crash protection so it will look scuffed up if it is asked to do its job. I would just repair it since it still has its structural integrity.
Regards,
Grumpy Goat
2016 BMW R1200RS
2023 Triumph Tiger 900 Rally Pro