F650Dakar_Norway
Registered user
I bumped into a car from behind at a lowly 20kmh in November and experienced surprisingly much damage to the front end. Typical stupid accident in rush traffic and the notorious second of concentration failure on my side.
Aftermath:
- smashed headlight
- broken front panel carrier (holds light and instrument panel etc.)
- broken beak
- broken beak-holder panels ( tank dummy )
- front fork bent out of alignment ( simply realigned afterwards
)
I managed to weave left and clipped the suddenly braking car left behind ( it barely got a crack in the left rear indicator panel ) while in a flurry I saw the whole instrument panel, beak and parts of the fake tank panels brake off the 800GS in pieces. In the end I fell over to the right while the broken front light and instruments assembly with fairing glass hung only by the electrical wires to the instruments. It took a fair amount of duct tape and zip-ties before I could ride on - as opposed to the 650 which has a more robust front assembly.
I escaped unhurt ( touch wood ), a dent in my pride and with surprisingly much damage on the bike. From my experience this motorcycle has a vastly less robust front end than the 650 Dakar. I know this the hard way after incidents with both.
The difference being mainly that the 650 draws benefit from having a far more solid front end assembly and a metal front panel carrier to hold the instrument cluster and main light. In 2007 I went down hard twice on icy gravel roads with the 650 Dakar in September on the mountain roads at Golsfjellet with only two broken LH indicator lenses, broken fairing glass and a broken clutch lever.
After changing the clutch lever, zip-tying the indicator lenses and duct-taping the fairing glass together I rode on with no hassle afterwards.
The F650 Dakar also has a single lens headlight being far more crash-resistant than the dual-lens, edgy 800GS headlight being supported by a surprisingly weak plastic profile front panel carrier. On the 650 the front light/instrument assembly is supported by a more solid metal carrier. In addition the beak of the 650 is far more robust and turns with the front fork so it doesn't break as easy as on the 800GS - whose stiff beak is prone to breakage at tipovers and crashes.
Lessons learned:
- Focus better in slow-moving rush traffic
- This bike has a cost-cutting-based less crash-resistant front end than the F650 Dakar
- The darn thing has expensive replacement parts
The latter was found out here:
http://www.maxbmwmotorcycles.com/fiche/MainDiagrams.asp?mospid=50779
Question:
Based on the above US microfiche;
What do these parts cost in the UK, Sweden, Germany or other countries?
63127697753 headlight (SAE) BUY 1 $426.34
46637714071 side trim graphics, front left - Up to 08/2008 BUY 1 $395.32
46637714072 side trim graphics, front right - Up to 08/2008 BUY1 $395.32
best regards
'08 F800GS '04 F650 Dakar '94 ST1100
SP2610/Cn2008
Aftermath:
- smashed headlight
- broken front panel carrier (holds light and instrument panel etc.)
- broken beak
- broken beak-holder panels ( tank dummy )
- front fork bent out of alignment ( simply realigned afterwards
)I managed to weave left and clipped the suddenly braking car left behind ( it barely got a crack in the left rear indicator panel ) while in a flurry I saw the whole instrument panel, beak and parts of the fake tank panels brake off the 800GS in pieces. In the end I fell over to the right while the broken front light and instruments assembly with fairing glass hung only by the electrical wires to the instruments. It took a fair amount of duct tape and zip-ties before I could ride on - as opposed to the 650 which has a more robust front assembly.
I escaped unhurt ( touch wood ), a dent in my pride and with surprisingly much damage on the bike. From my experience this motorcycle has a vastly less robust front end than the 650 Dakar. I know this the hard way after incidents with both.
The difference being mainly that the 650 draws benefit from having a far more solid front end assembly and a metal front panel carrier to hold the instrument cluster and main light. In 2007 I went down hard twice on icy gravel roads with the 650 Dakar in September on the mountain roads at Golsfjellet with only two broken LH indicator lenses, broken fairing glass and a broken clutch lever.
After changing the clutch lever, zip-tying the indicator lenses and duct-taping the fairing glass together I rode on with no hassle afterwards.
The F650 Dakar also has a single lens headlight being far more crash-resistant than the dual-lens, edgy 800GS headlight being supported by a surprisingly weak plastic profile front panel carrier. On the 650 the front light/instrument assembly is supported by a more solid metal carrier. In addition the beak of the 650 is far more robust and turns with the front fork so it doesn't break as easy as on the 800GS - whose stiff beak is prone to breakage at tipovers and crashes.
Lessons learned:
- Focus better in slow-moving rush traffic

- This bike has a cost-cutting-based less crash-resistant front end than the F650 Dakar

- The darn thing has expensive replacement parts
The latter was found out here:
http://www.maxbmwmotorcycles.com/fiche/MainDiagrams.asp?mospid=50779
Question:
Based on the above US microfiche;
What do these parts cost in the UK, Sweden, Germany or other countries?
63127697753 headlight (SAE) BUY 1 $426.34
46637714071 side trim graphics, front left - Up to 08/2008 BUY 1 $395.32
46637714072 side trim graphics, front right - Up to 08/2008 BUY1 $395.32
best regards
'08 F800GS '04 F650 Dakar '94 ST1100
SP2610/Cn2008

