Hi
I placed a post at the weekend hoping to get info to sort out the problem I appear to have with the rear brake, it seems to get extremely hot. The advice offered was great but everything checks out. The planned holiday (hotel last night, ferry this morning and hotels for the next 10 days in France through to Italy all now cancelled and no money back) and so I have dropped the bike into local dealer who supplied it.
Anyway they have run it on a test ride and the caliper gets to 54 degrees (you can't keep your hand on the caliper, you can't touch the disc) and on the same route they have then put a matching caliper on my bike and run it on the same test route and when measured it also runs at 54 degrees on the caliper.
At this point the wheel spins freely but if you push the floating caliper in you can increase this to no resistance at all.
So, is there anyone out there who is on a bit of a ride tonight on a GS or GSA 1200 air, (mines 2012) who can just put there hand on or near the rear caliper (without getting burned!) to tell me if theirs also runs hot (ie. you couldn't place your hand on the caliper and leave it there).
The front calipers at the same point are cold.
Also, can anyone confirm if they are linked brakes, the back wheel on the stand seems to stop when you operate front brake but apparently it doesn't happen on the rolling road.
It may be its expected to get that hot, I just can't understand why the front ones don't and in fact I can remember it being like that before.
Cheers
I placed a post at the weekend hoping to get info to sort out the problem I appear to have with the rear brake, it seems to get extremely hot. The advice offered was great but everything checks out. The planned holiday (hotel last night, ferry this morning and hotels for the next 10 days in France through to Italy all now cancelled and no money back) and so I have dropped the bike into local dealer who supplied it.
Anyway they have run it on a test ride and the caliper gets to 54 degrees (you can't keep your hand on the caliper, you can't touch the disc) and on the same route they have then put a matching caliper on my bike and run it on the same test route and when measured it also runs at 54 degrees on the caliper.
At this point the wheel spins freely but if you push the floating caliper in you can increase this to no resistance at all.
So, is there anyone out there who is on a bit of a ride tonight on a GS or GSA 1200 air, (mines 2012) who can just put there hand on or near the rear caliper (without getting burned!) to tell me if theirs also runs hot (ie. you couldn't place your hand on the caliper and leave it there).
The front calipers at the same point are cold.
Also, can anyone confirm if they are linked brakes, the back wheel on the stand seems to stop when you operate front brake but apparently it doesn't happen on the rolling road.
It may be its expected to get that hot, I just can't understand why the front ones don't and in fact I can remember it being like that before.
Cheers