Deleted account 221212001
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- Joined
- Jul 14, 2018
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Always negotiate a free first service at the point of purchase of a new bike. I even negotiate discount off my first service on used bikes!!

You're clearly no longer enamoured with BMW. Hanging around a BMW site just to slag them off seems rather strange behaviour.
Just paid €185 for the first service. Oil only was €125. That is ridiculous price for oil. I love the bike but as soon as it gets out of 3 years warranty it'll be serviced by me or one friend of mine that owns Suzuki dealer.
It's literally 20 minutes work
Oil change, filter and bevel gear oil change. Plug it in, set your service light and check your tyre pressures.
In the busy summer months, we could do three an hour.
Don't forget, you pay £20 per litre for that £5 per litre re-branded oil.
However, it's not exactly cheap running those huge dealerships. You're paying for all the fanfare that goes with keeping that going. Staff, business rates, free coffee, training, pensions, etc, blah blah blah.
I charge £90 for a first service. Because I don't feed you croissants and give you a leather couch to sit on. Although if you ask nicely I'll make you a cuppa and might even wash the cup![]()

My post was tic , playing on the shaft drive etc,but I see that you’ve assumed the role of protective parent and won’t have a bad word said against your little baby.
How sweet !
And I’m very enamoured with my BMW GS sat in the garage,thanks.
You do not need to use a BMW main dealer to maintain your warranty. It's the biggest lie in the business. You must use equivalent grade and quality fluids and a genuine filter though. And it must be performed by a qualified professional.
The japs have got onto this. They offer their standard two year warranty on their bikes no matter who does the servicing. However, they give you an extra year warranty for free if you keep it in their network.

I understand that, as do most people these days I think (although I read somewhere that the EU rules on this were specifically about cars rather than all vehicles). Whatever, my reasoning for going with the dealers is that if anything goes bang and it's been serviced elsewhere or by me - no matter how competently - it gives them a foot in the door to begin arguing about it. It might begin a saga of letters and evidence that would take days or weeks, and I need my bike to be on the road. For an additional cost of around £100 a year, that seems like a reasonable price to pay. Probably money down the drain, but might save a load of hassle.
I've used a local independent for work in the past when the bike is out of warranty and will continue to do so.
I enjoy doing simple tasks on the bike and while I might not have it down to 20 minutes, I enjoy a happy hour doing the oil changes. Except on the R1150GS where the final drive oil change meant dropping the final drive unit from the shaft and spending an hour or two swearing trying to get the fucking shaft back in.
EDIT: Here's what White Dalton said about dealer servicing back in 2013. (Things might well have changed since then but Google doesn't throw up anything obvious that is more recent.)
"The short answer is that if you have your bike serviced by a perfectly reputable, fully qualified mechanic using all the appropriate parts and specified fluids, the exemption that applies to cars under the Office of Fair Trading guidance, which led to the OFT threatening to take all major motor manufacturers to Court, does not apply to motorcycles."
That could be a new tag line.
“BUY A GS AND GET SHAFTED....IN EVERY WAY”![]()
Yes. But that was 8 years ago and literally just semantics of legal text from one solicitor. In the real world, according to BMW, it doesn't matter.![]()
I'm more than happy to consider the good and bad points of the bike and BMW ownership. But it'd be like me logging on to a KTM site just to slag off KTM. Not sure why you'd want to do that.
9000 mile service on my KTM was £277, which for an oil and filter change is rather ripe. It's not just BMW dealers who are doing the shafting.
I have no idea what you’re on about.
This is forum based around the GS.
Many members are on here but no longer own a GS.I do own one.
That’s ridiculous !!
If you watch the 44 teeth channel you will see that same solicitor talking about a case he is fighting with Triumph very recently over warranty and non dealer work on a bike. Basically Triumph said the warranty was void.
Mine too, negotiated in the price when old one traded in
As I said before, if you negotiate on one element you're probably losing out on another. Save £72 on first service labour and they'll knock £72 off part-exchange or discount or something else.