17" alloy wheels conversion on 1200GSA

JMO but it looks ridiculus on most, if not all, GS's. And the one 12GSA i've seen with the modification looked the most stupid:(

Shep
 
FWIW, Motorworks do a "kit" using R1200S wheels. I'm tempted by it, but thought it best to sort the suspension first and then re-assess.
 
FWIW, Motorworks do a "kit" using R1200S wheels. I'm tempted by it, but thought it best to sort the suspension first and then re-assess.

I agree and with Dunlop Roadsmart soon to be available for the GS, finding good bitumen tyres should not be the issue that it has been.

I would be worried that fitting a 17" front without making any other modifications to the bikes geometry may result in the bike being nervous at speed in a straight line due to the steering being a bit quicker.

Mick
 
I did it on my last GS, see pic. & really improved the handling. I also fitted a special front fender. The bike felt much more planted in the corners. I even tried it out at a Brands Hatch track day, as well as all over the Swiss mountain passes. Lots of people in the US have done this, and I'm sure if you do a search on here you will find lots of info. One of the UK dealers did the same conversion & it had great write ups in the press.
I used Pirelli Scorpion Syncs on mine (same as the KTM 990SM) & they were really great. I tried Michellin Pilot 2's & the bike did not like them at all, at speed you got a weave.
You can see these wheels & conversions on the Boxer design web site.

As the wheels won't fit on my new 1200GS, due to tyre sensors, they might be for sale, complete with discs, ABS ring & nearly new tyres.

One note, you have to use a non std. exhaust for the wheel clearence.
 

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I like the look of that especially with the front guard although for the cost of wheels etc personally I`d spend it on a suspension upgrade :thumb2
 
I did it on my last GS, see pic. & really improved the handling. I also fitted a special front fender. The bike felt much more planted in the corners. I even tried it out at a Brands Hatch track day, as well as all over the Swiss mountain passes. Lots of people in the US have done this, and I'm sure if you do a search on here you will find lots of info. One of the UK dealers did the same conversion & it had great write ups in the press.
I used Pirelli Scorpion Syncs on mine (same as the KTM 990SM) & they were really great. I tried Michellin Pilot 2's & the bike did not like them at all, at speed you got a weave.
You can see these wheels & conversions on the Boxer design web site.

As the wheels won't fit on my new 1200GS, due to tyre sensors, they might be for sale, complete with discs, ABS ring & nearly new tyres.

One note, you have to use a non std. exhaust for the wheel clearence.

whats the front fender off
 
My 1150 (2k single spark) has both 17" Alloys and original spoked wheels. I've got BT020/021 combination on the alloys and Distanzas on the spoked. I put the spokes back on just before Xmas and the difference is very noticeable. The handling is FAR superior with the alloys (not that there is anything at all wrong with the 'normal' handling), it steers quicker in a very positive way, you only have to 'think' about dropping into a bend and it's there, but never in an alarming way. I've had no stability issues at motorway speeds, solo or two-up, but I haven't tried it fully loaded yet. Personally I think the bike looks great whichever wheels are on it, the only slightly odd looking things are the spacers under the fork brace which drop the Carbon Fibre front mudguard down closer to the wheel, although they're not too noticeable at first glance. Still uses the standard exhaust on the 1150. I haven't checked the speedo against my GPS to see if it makes any/much difference to the calibration, if anything it should read fast with the smaller front wheel on.
All in all a very worthwhile conversion IMHO :thumb2

DSC01155.jpg
 
Speedo reading on my 1200GS was correct after the wheel change. Something to do with where the reading is taken from.
 
Speedo reading on my 1200GS was correct after the wheel change. Something to do with where the reading is taken from.

IIRC 1200's read from the gearbox, not the wheel.

If the rolling circumference of the wheels is smaller, where the reading was taken from is irrelevant....smaller wheels=higher revs for given speed.

You'd have to fit a different ratio drive to the speedo take off to reset the speedo- fairly easy on a hub driven unit but I've no idea on a Gbox driven unit.
 
It shouldn't be too bad, as there's is only a small change in size for the back wheel (which would be the relevant one for a box-driven speedo). The theoretical difference between 150/70 and 180/55 is only -6mm sidewall height. Run the numbers for the circumference and the difference ends up at under 2%.

This is assuming a "perfect" tyre - I'm sure there's more variance than that between brands.
 
Before I changed my wheels I asked about speedo reading at the dealers & they said it should read correctly. I have used a Garmin GPS a lot & didn't notice any difference (apart from the usual discrepancy of a speedo).
Anyone considering doing this should do a search on adventurerider.com
 


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