First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Pull up a chair - let's talk Boxerbollox

Moderators: slparry, Gromit, Paul

boxerscott
Posts: 3723
Joined: Sat Apr 21, 2007 5:07 pm
Location: scottish borders
Contact:

First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by boxerscott »

So after 3 months of gathering dust in my garage I finally got to give it a good 2 up with luggage test at the Boxertrix Welsh Weekend. The first positive and the important one was from the pillion, my wife Amanda. After 5 mins of pussyfooting around with it on the way over to Hawick. I could not resist pushing it a bit down the A7 to Junc 44 M6 Carlisle. The M6 slog to Wales is Shxt on any bike and was broken up by a fuel stop at Lancaster and a visit to Asda for man things. Amanda was still comfortable and raving about the seat and lack of ejector impulses from the unnoticeable ESA.

She enquired as if I was supposed to be running it in. Aye I said. Manual says not to exceed 5krpm and no full throttle. The Sat Nav took us on a blinder into north wales once we left the A56. After the <300 mile journey we arrived at the destination with smiles on our faces. That we lived to ride another day.

For the ride out the next day we were presented with full blue skies , bright sunshine and dry roads. The tyres were scrubbed in and the rider had a bit more familiarity with the bikes capabilities. Lovely suspension, powerful brakes and seamless gearbox however the main deal is the engine, how smooth? Hot Chocolate smooth.. I tell you mate. Good top gear roll on and pulls well at lowish rpm too. You still know you are on a Boxer when you fire it out of the bend by the engine tones emitting from the Zorst. The standard zorst on mine has a chrome cover which does a good job of insulating the heat from roasting the pillions leg. Entering and exiting the bends is made much more exciting by taking advantage of the gear assist pro once you have put trust in the fact that it actually works and you will not break anything or lock anything up when you scrub off speed quickly. Brakes are excellent. This bike inherits a lot of the s1000rr componentry so it will hustle with the best with a competent rider on board (not me).

The bike inspires confidence, has a really great riding position, a narrow waist where feet can be firmly put to ground even for the shortest of legs.
After >600 miles we are really pleased with our purchase. It was not inexpensive but there is a reason for that... it is all round excellent. Do not take my word for it try one. I bought mine on reviews and advice from others, never even test rode it. If it is a new boxer that you are after you could not be better advised to try this one before you buy. :)

Chris
Last edited by boxerscott on Mon Apr 24, 2017 8:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Fiat Panda.
Fiat Scudo (with speedblock, pipe carrier, reversing sensors, reversing camera, tow bar, some new rust and Fake Plumber logo)


started out with nothing, still have most of it left.
User avatar
slparry
Moderator
Posts: 6731
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 7:19 pm
Location: Wrexham
Contact:

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by slparry »

Great review Chris, for a great bike. Glad you both love it, and as you say it’s testament to the bike that the trip down was completed in comfort! ... (edited to add the missing bit :D)
--
Steve Parry


Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
boxerscott
Posts: 3723
Joined: Sat Apr 21, 2007 5:07 pm
Location: scottish borders
Contact:

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by boxerscott »

slparry wrote:Great review Chris, for a great bike. Glad you both love it, and as you say it’s testament to the bike that the trip down was completed!
OUCH :!:
Fiat Panda.
Fiat Scudo (with speedblock, pipe carrier, reversing sensors, reversing camera, tow bar, some new rust and Fake Plumber logo)


started out with nothing, still have most of it left.
User avatar
slparry
Moderator
Posts: 6731
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 7:19 pm
Location: Wrexham
Contact:

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by slparry »

Damn missed the last bit.... was completed in comfort :)
--
Steve Parry


Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
Mitch1100
Member
Posts: 995
Joined: Tue Apr 23, 2013 9:00 am
Location: Tasmania

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by Mitch1100 »

Hi Chris...no mention of wind buffeting so small screen works well?
2009 HP2 Sport...sold
2006 R1200s with yellow rim tape
2008 Ducati Monster S4RS Tricolore..sold
2004 R1100s BoxerCup Replika..sold
2006 Subaru WRX STI S204 #318/600
boxerscott
Posts: 3723
Joined: Sat Apr 21, 2007 5:07 pm
Location: scottish borders
Contact:

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by boxerscott »

Mitch1100 wrote:Hi Chris...no mention of wind buffeting so small screen works well?
Like any roadster with a small screen wind buffeting exists but not a peep from pillion. I did not find it unbearable, noticeable yes but not as to make me want to go out and start faffing for a whopping touring screen or even think about it in the review. Sundays ride was affected by a fairly strong cross wind and my neck could feel that but that would have happened on any bike I reckon.

Only thing that I could nit pick with was the joggle control on the left hand bar. On a couple of occasions when I was a little clumsy with the indicator push I inadvertently knocked the Joggle and lost the Map on sat nav.
Fiat Panda.
Fiat Scudo (with speedblock, pipe carrier, reversing sensors, reversing camera, tow bar, some new rust and Fake Plumber logo)


started out with nothing, still have most of it left.
User avatar
slparry
Moderator
Posts: 6731
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 7:19 pm
Location: Wrexham
Contact:

Re: First Ride, BMW R1200r LC

Post by slparry »

boxerscott wrote:
Mitch1100 wrote:Hi Chris...no mention of wind buffeting so small screen works well?
Like any roadster with a small screen wind buffeting exists but not a peep from pillion. I did not find it unbearable, noticeable yes but not as to make me want to go out and start faffing for a whopping touring screen or even think about it in the review. Sundays ride was affected by a fairly strong cross wind and my neck could feel that but that would have happened on any bike I reckon.

Only thing that I could nit pick with was the joggle control on the left hand bar. On a couple of occasions when I was a little clumsy with the indicator push I inadvertently knocked the Joggle and lost the Map on sat nav.
You soon adapt to the "wonderwheel", when I first had my RT it seemed a stretch on the left cluster but now is 2nd nature
--
Steve Parry


Current fleet: '14 F800GS, '87 R80RS, '03 R1100S BoxerCup, '15 R1200RT LE Dynamic, '90 K1, '05 K1200S
Post Reply Previous topicNext topic