As you can see there are a great variety of views. All relevant. Here is my thoughts.
I’ve had 5 BMW’S...
I found each one was a bit poorer quality than the previous one and you have to accept the poorer quality as part of the deal. Having said that, the dealers in the UK are very supportive if you find one you get on with. However, the support in Europe is not that good. My 2019 1250GS broke down in Austria at about 3 months old and was lifted away by a HIAB van using the handlebars and pannier rails to lift it - I was not impressed. I had to eventually go to the dealer in Innsbruck 2 days later and sort it out myself as BMW assist had not told them what the problem was.
There are other things as well such as the mysterious cylinder knocking. Eventually I just lost faith in both the bike and BMW so I went elsewhere for my next bike.
If you can afford to buy a new one often, then get a 1250 GS as it’s a cracking motorcycle.
Botus of course in these dark days of globalism where the banksters and profits for the few stand above everything long time quality has taken a beating...But it is not as bad as you say.10 years ago the quality hasn't been any better or worse and I still see lots of R1200GS that are now 10-15 years old in good shape ridden every week.Of course not much rain or salt here.But I say that the new 1250GS are better and more reliable/cheaper to maintain than the 1200GS they made 15 years ago;
-No more gear box oil to change
-No more throttle bodies to adjust
-No more costly splits to get to the clutch
-No more leaky seals (RMS,balance shaft,gear box) that can cause costly repairs
-No electric servos on brakes that can cause costly repairs later
Much better paint or castings and higher quality plastics than you get from the japanese...
The old 2-V stuff was less reliable with diode boards getting bad,u-joints on the shaft,valve seats that wore prematurely,constand throttle body and valve adjustments and leaky pushrod seals or camchains that streched and needed to be replaced every 40K miles or carburetor diaphrams getting bad causing the slides not to open properly.
Not to mention having no power,wobbly frames and no brakes...
The new stuff is much better & more reliable !
If you think the paint is better you must be joking. If you live in the UK you can watch it rot away in front of your eyes.
And hope your alternator doesn't fail on your early LC!
Botus of course in these dark days of globalism where the banksters and profits for the few stand above everything long time quality has taken a beating...But it is not as bad as you say.10 years ago the
The new stuff is much better & more reliable !
If you think the paint is better you must be joking. If you live in the UK you can watch it rot away in front of your eyes.

Dear all
thank you for all the replies. Thank you for taking the time to write lots of detail; very helpful indeed. I take on board especially the comments about the earlier and later LC's. When I bought Bertie my 2010 GSA TC I knew I was getting the 'last' of the oilheads and therefore it should be well sorted. By and large I was right, it got me and Jenny round the world and never broke down (never got a puncture either - thank you Heidenau K60's!) It wasn't cheap to run though. Before we went the rear shock damping went at 22,000 miles and turned the bike into a pogo stick in Spain. The use of a towel rolled up and wrapped into the spring (The SHITE system - Secondary Hydraulic Inhibited Towel Enhancement) got us home to UK. Subsequent fitting of front and rear Wilburs suspension with REVS of Halesowen and also careful subsequent pre-trip prep like putting a new clutch in and on our last trip a new driveshaft pre UK to Australia also helped. Out on the road we had the failure of the FD in Cottbus in the old East Germany (€ 1,700) but didn't stop us and much easier, the failure of the side stand cut out switch (split the sensor cable, cut orange and white and join them together to disable) in Chile were all solvable. Dropped the bike (& the wife) more times than I care to remember but it just kept going. Fuel injection also a boon with amazingly good fuel consumption at altitude (but loss of power) and amazingly bad fuel consumption when head butting huge winds in Patagonia. All in all, a good bike. Time now to replace it; #feelingemotional ! Thanks again for all the advice and the time you spent writing it - merry xmas one and all and here's to a full resumption of all our 2 wheeled travels in 2021.

My GSA is ten years old and I also have this quandary, do I go for a GS, a GSA or heavens above go for the 1250RT or even look outside BMW. The trouble is I want a big twin with shaft drive, decent tank size and range, large luggage capacity for when SWMBO is onboard and all day comfort. When you take all of that criteria there is not a huge amount of options out there.
I had the same thought last August. I ended up with a Goldwing. 4200 miles on it now and Im enjoying more every time i get it out. You may think about test riding one .
Couldn't stretch to a new one at the price they are but maybe a second hand one.