R1200S - Knockout or bloody nose ?!
Moderators: slparry, Gromit, Paul
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I've just taken delivery of a new GSXR,
,and I have to say that I am very pleasantly surprised. Virtually all the bits that have rotted on my S - disc bolts, disc 'bobbins' mudguard bolts etc - are in stainless on the GSXR, unless I'm very much mistaken.
OK it's got a chain but that's the only downside - I even get 170 miles to the fuel light. I'm not sure that BMW has been a premium product for a while.......
....(wait for the hail of stones)

OK it's got a chain but that's the only downside - I even get 170 miles to the fuel light. I'm not sure that BMW has been a premium product for a while.......
....(wait for the hail of stones)
- nab 301
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Joking aside , have they sorted the problems with stones etc punching holes in the belts and how awkward are the belts to fit ?Gromit wrote:adamski49 wrote:
Belt's the way to go though - smooth, zero maintenance, long-lasting, quiet, clean (no lube needed) and lighter than a chain. In fact my perfect bike would be...
.
Nigel B
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Nigel
Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you've been up to!
1999 R1100s (mandarin) '
2018 DL 250V Strom
2019 CB125F Honda.
MZ301 Saxon Fun ( currently retired)
'03 Bullet 65 project..
Nigel
Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you've been up to!
1999 R1100s (mandarin) '
2018 DL 250V Strom
2019 CB125F Honda.
MZ301 Saxon Fun ( currently retired)
'03 Bullet 65 project..
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It'll never flynab 301 wrote:Gromit wrote:Joking aside , have they sorted the problems with stones etc punching holes in the belts and how awkward are the belts to fit ?adamski49 wrote:
Belt's the way to go though - smooth, zero maintenance, long-lasting, quiet, clean (no lube needed) and lighter than a chain. In fact my perfect bike would be...
.
Nigel B

Lloyd
It's not how fast you ride, it's how you ride fast.
Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear
bright until you hear them speak.
It's not how fast you ride, it's how you ride fast.
Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear
bright until you hear them speak.
- nab 301
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- Gromit
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Nigel - During its development, they had the Ulysses belt drive system on a test rig and continually fired pebbles at it to try and break it but no damage was done. The newer belt system's designed to eject stones before they can harm the belt, apparently. Biggest problem from belts snapping on the earlier XB's stemmed from tyre fitters allowing the belt to twist whilst removing the rear wheel. This causes the belt to de-laminate, seriously weakening it.nab 301 wrote:
Joking aside , have they sorted the problems with stones etc punching holes in the belts and how awkward are the belts to fit ?
Nigel B
I've seen someone (who knows what they're doing admittedly) change a belt on a Firebolt in under half an hour. Sprockets never wear.
Lloyd - you're right. Racing sells bikes, but as usual it doesn't always bring about a more relevant product for the road.
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I believe the main problem is that no one makes enough different size pulleys to give differing final drive ratios. Similarly to what Lloyd said, no one races with a belt drive bike, so no one makes the stuff to supply them.Archie wrote:
Shouldn't be different to a chain - do you not just remove the swingarm? Or have I missed something?
Adrenalin Moto's Buell XB racer runs a chain conversion.
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- herrman
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You are correct, but I guess we're here cos the S is different so haven't been snared by the roadracer logic therefore can look at things more objectivelyGromit wrote:
Lloyd - you're right. Racing sells bikes, but as usual it doesn't always bring about a more relevant product for the road.

It was the manufacture and supply of different pulley sizes that I was referring to in previous post.
Lloyd
It's not how fast you ride, it's how you ride fast.
Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear
bright until you hear them speak.
It's not how fast you ride, it's how you ride fast.
Light travels faster than sound. That's why some people appear
bright until you hear them speak.
- Gromit
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- Joined: Mon Feb 16, 2004 8:33 pm
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It doesn't surprise me - I have it on good authority that a certain HD dealer not a million miles from me had several XB belts go ping before they realised what was causing the problem.herrman wrote:I can confirm that tyre fitters caused the early XB belt problems allthough it was the fitter in a H/D dealers workshop(?) that caused mine to fail.

Thing is, belt breakages are now virtually unheard of but reputations stick unfortunately.

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