TerryM said:Hi TST,
I have had the oem bars fitted from new. They are of better quality and fit than any of the aftermarket stuff shown on this site or advrider
Terry

Marty Hill said:I also have the BMW bars on. Easy on and good quality. I too have heard of various problems with the H/B bars.
swebb said:Interesting opinion, i'm assuming in order to come to this opinion TerryM has ofcourse tried the "aftermarket" equivalents that he has personally found to be so poor in comparison? (everyone is entitled to their own opinion i guess)
i would suggest perhaps doing a search on the forum for both the BMW and the H&B ones, i think you'll find that popular opininion tends to lead one way, with some quite compelling engineering perspectives on both sets....
grab a beer, sit down with your search button, do the background, and come to your own conclusion.....![]()

Simon B said:have just purchased a 1200 and so far have no crash bars fitted ! reading these replies it seems that most riders see them as essential - is this true? The likelihood of me dropping the bike at some stage whilst moving it in and out of the garage is a distinct possibilty. Cylinder damage sounds expensive ??
Also what are the HM ones some owners are referring to? Excuse my ignorance but am new to this site and to GS owning so please be gentle with me![]()
No they're not necessary. I've dropped mine once and been punted off once. Both times the machine fell on the cylinder protectors without further damage.Simon B said:have just purchased a 1200 and so far have no crash bars fitted ! reading these replies it seems that most riders see them as essential - is this true? The likelihood of me dropping the bike at some stage whilst moving it in and out of the garage is a distinct possibilty. Cylinder damage sounds expensive ??
Also what are the HM ones some owners are referring to? Excuse my ignorance but am new to this site and to GS owning so please be gentle with me![]()
TerryM said:Certainly not "tried" in the prang sense, I suspect only BMW do that sort of thing.
But examined physically and evaluated the design, construction and attachment points. These are not subjective, despite the fashion for everyone being entitled to their opinion, it is usual to reach an engineering conclusion on such simple matters without concern for democracy. That is what engineers do.
The drop modes maybe divided into static and dynamic.
Falling over in a static situation will be affected by adjacent kerbs or an object on the garage floor etc which it is hard to design for as the vertical impact(s) maybe in several locations and virtually simultaneous. Only a total enclosure would be likely to be wholly effective.
The dynamic drop is the one which, I suspect, concerns the designers most. As gravity in a fall proceeds at only 32 feet per second but a bike at 60mph is travelling at 88 feet per second(1 mile per minute=1760 yardsx3=5280 feet/60=88 feet per second) the greater potential for damage in horizontal mode is evident. And the bike may suffer multiple impacts when sliding for a considerable distance.
In this situation attachment points, weld details, materials, controlled collapse and materials all play their part in not just saving the bike from the initial, and relatively low, vertical component but also from the sustained stress of the slide and any horizontal impacts which are likely to be far more severe. In fact, at 60mph the horizontal component is about three times gravity, so a sliding 12GS will hit with the force of an object weighing about 670kg. In this case a very rigid set of bars may transmit excessive loads to the engine and chassis. Read write-off.
And so I made my choice.
Terry

TST said:Thanks for all replys. I'm going for the orginal BMW crash-bar.![]()
TerryM said:
Where are you located in Norway?
Terry