Deleted account 191119001
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I disagree, Knutk. The front wheel only has forward braking forces to deal with (Ok and turning and centrifugal but they aren't extreme enough, I don't think, and part of the design anyway). Under acceleration the rear wheel carries most of the weight and can increase it by quite some margin) as it does when you use engine braking and normal braking. Under normal braking the rear wheel wants to sink but is mitigated by the ESA and also carries a fair bit of weight.
The front wheel only really experiences extreme forces under hard braking. It also experiences stresses offroad but, again, designed for that with the caveat that the spokes should be checked. Offroaders (scramblers, enduro, pure ones, not big KTMs and the like) do not tend to be fast or used on motorways, much less with any luggage or pillion loads and they also tend to be much, much lighter.
I agree, the forces on a gravel or offroad surface are not the same as on tarmac where the traction is far greater.
Warlord, I don't think it would take much more than a couple of loose spokes at most to get the effect you are after in your experiment.
Hence some of the OP,s on here are getting wheels changed by BMW because of loose spokes, seems strange BMW would change a wheel because of loose spokes, must be more to that, they know something is wrong.
