I swapped mine when it was only four months and 1500 miles old!I might look into that once the warranty’s expired![]()
I then had to take it in for it`s 6k service and driveshaft check - i told them about the final drive swap and they didn`t seem too concerned.
It did have the shaft replaced though (at 4.5K), i think this may have been more to do with their test equipment not being set up for the different gearing ratio rather than the shaft itself being faulty. They said the equipment could not even turn the wheel so the test resulted in a `fail`..
It`s exactly the same as an RT now - all engines, gearboxes and drivelines are exactly the same throughout the R-series 1250`s the only difference is in the final drive ratios for each model: 2.75 for the RT, 2.82 for the RS and 2.91 for the GS.So long as the engine power and the clutch can cope with the slightly taller gearing when pulling away then why not. If you only ride on tarmac and don’t need a super low first gear it makes sense.
No offroading for me, and it pulls away/copes with being loaded up (with pillion for example) perfectly. After all, RT owners are also known to pile on the luggage and strap a wife to the back and go off on tour.
As above, all the gearbox ratios are the same throughout the R-series 1250`s so there is no easy way of swapping cogs with another model to achieve what you desire and you already have the lowest gearing of all the models (assuming you are talking about a GS).I'd rather have more rapid acceleration. How would I change the gearing to achieve that?
You could possibly look into wheel and tyre sizes to see if you could get a lower aspect ratio/smaller circumference tyre on there but that would only make a marginal difference i would think.
