Interesting views. I do have half an eye on 'trading up' but quite torn because my TC - bar one screw up last Nov/Dec - has been truly wonderful and the love affair goes on. I have been blessed with a good apple and it gets looked after too. I only do long journeys on it, which is one area a few more horse would be welcome once it's loaded up.
So I am interested in what you think of the LC. I guess the TC was already a 'step too far' into vehicle electronics. That has turned out to be completely unfounded. But I am unclear if it is actually quite a different leap into the LC world, especially the 1300 (which is where my eyes are looking)?
If I was to pick a good value big GS to own a lifetime, my choice would be a 2015-2018 R1200LC.
There is nothing wrong with the later models. They're just still rather expensive.
The earlier pre TFT /shift cam bike often gets overlooked by those who want the newer tech. So the prices reflect that. They're very good value at the moment.
The 15/16 were Euro 4 had no carbon canister. No super expensive TFT screen. I think they run smoother too. Richer perhaps. Simpler to service and maintain.
This generation on LC will also get a new shaft every 60,000 miles courtesy of BMW.
You'll have to buy your own on 2022 or newer. £1000 plus.
People do wax lyrical about the hex heads. But they were incredibly problematic over their time. And they still have many flaws now which make long term ownership potentially organ-sellingly expensive.
An oil leak on the crank can cost you £2000 to fix at a dealer. Clutch replacement the same price.
Their gearboxes can be crap, the shafts snap when worn and the bevel drives leak and eat their bearings more than any other GS In my experience.
Then you talk fuel pumps, fuel strips etc
The bevel drives on the LC are FAR superior. And a clutch replacement takes an hour.
The only future issue I see on ageing LCs is the stator
It's on the back of the engine. It's an engine out job. A dead stator could cost more than bike if you took it to a dealer.
Another thing with the LCs is that the cylinders are part of the crank case. Any work on those is an engine out job too.