Kenny did a great write up after his mod that got us all salivating...
I have looked into it and have initially found that getting the bits + setting up would not leave you too shy of the SED price if you take away his labour. I also looked at carbs 2nd hand but their was a little rush on Bing 40's after the chat about conversions...
I also emailed Mr SED as he is a good guy for advice and general helpfulness but is also extrememly busy. He rebuild my M94 gearbox and i know that he is also very good VFM to boot.
As I don't usually "go expensive" on my bike I haven't though about the direct SED route but know that it would be a very well modded bike with an engineers detail finish. Also my 11 GS is not quite as tidy as Kenny's...
If you have a good seat of the pants dyno from BM's and a range of other bikes you will know that the main part of many bikes especially twins is to have a strong pulling low and mid range... In standard tune the R11's need revving over 2.5/3k and go a little flat in the midrange. This is also shown on Dyno runs.
I had an 11GS in the early 2000's that I took to Superchip which along with some other popular mods made it a fantastic bike but they still found it hard to fill the midrange fully. If you find the original dyno runs on here from Thunder i think, re the carb mod, you will see a large hike in the midrange which in unachievable by tuning the Motronic.
At the mo i have settled for the more open set up that is popular and fitting a cheap chip to richen things slightly where the bike naturally runs lean and which is probably slightly exaggerated by the open set up. All chips do is play with the duration of the injection and the ignition advance and they are cheap as a part but more expensive in the set up, just like carbs.
There is no real "cheap" way to replicate Kenny's set up and if you want the same idea of performance and reliability then you may as well go the whole hog.
I went away and completely serviced my injection set up and this has also made a massive difference. My bike now runs very smoothly and has a strong low and mid range for a Motronic bike. As with a carb set up you have to persevere if you want to do it yourself and setting up carbs, especially CV's can take a fair bit of messing.
As a caveat... my present GS had never been a smooth slow runner despite all the usual service work, I rode a R100 Mystic last summer and wondered how carbs could feel so much better in the lower revs, ans I know from experience that many mechanics will only go through "the usual" with your bike rather than explore many of the set up checks you will read on here. Also apart from the show stopper HES, Motronic is usually very reliable...
Also and this is a big also, if you are happy with your bike don't bother.....
I'm glad Kenny chipped in (geddit

) as he has had it done and knows the difference and is not speculating...
