Hoseman
Registered user
Whilst stopped to study map at side of road, my hapless bulky pillion decided to weight shift drastically to starboard. The unexpected inertia caused the usual 10 seconds hernia inducing struggle before Mr Newton favorite Law took charge and capsized my beauty. (R1200GS ABS 700miles)
After removing our heads from the centre of the busy road we picked her up, to inspected the damage, cheifly an assortment of nasty scars on the right hand Cylinder cover. Anyway after a few minutes of relection it occured to me that those aluminuim cylinder covers as fitted to the adventure would cover the aformentioned scars.
Does anyone know how much they cost and do they fit directly to the standard GS.
Anyway no other damage was apparent until i put the key in the ingnition and there wasn't the usual servo noise when the front brake was applied. Brake failure was confirmed with a short test ride. Bmw Emergency service was summonded and responed promptly (about 45mins). Engineer pumped the braked about 20 times and the servos came back to life and stated that the system was now fine.
Has this happened to anyone else? Should i get the system checked out by the dealer? I rode it home with out incident but confidence in the system is now in question. The engineer said it was probably air in the system after the spill which was perged by the pumping of the lever.
After removing our heads from the centre of the busy road we picked her up, to inspected the damage, cheifly an assortment of nasty scars on the right hand Cylinder cover. Anyway after a few minutes of relection it occured to me that those aluminuim cylinder covers as fitted to the adventure would cover the aformentioned scars.
Does anyone know how much they cost and do they fit directly to the standard GS.
Anyway no other damage was apparent until i put the key in the ingnition and there wasn't the usual servo noise when the front brake was applied. Brake failure was confirmed with a short test ride. Bmw Emergency service was summonded and responed promptly (about 45mins). Engineer pumped the braked about 20 times and the servos came back to life and stated that the system was now fine.
Has this happened to anyone else? Should i get the system checked out by the dealer? I rode it home with out incident but confidence in the system is now in question. The engineer said it was probably air in the system after the spill which was perged by the pumping of the lever.

