Has your GS1200 been reliable...or not?

This would be a handy thread if it had people saying what bike they have, how many miles the have done and if they had any problems.

All these things go the same way, when someone mentions their bike has been anything other than faultless a crowd of "blinkered's" jump on them and tell them thier wrong the bike is great they sell more GS models than there are grains of sand and everyone does rocketship mileage on them :blagblah

If just the straight answers were here with each respondant entitled to his opinion then it would be a useful insight, however I am far more confused.

Anyway my '08 model which had 6k when purchased 6 weeks ago - must have been clocked as they all do at least 50k a year don't they :nenau

And in about 900 miles has not gone wrong, so they ust be faultless and perfect, great :thumb2

What is clear is they have had several show stopper common faults EWS / FPC / FD and a few other more typical niggles with other bits and pieces, corrosion etc.

Most bikes have faults but not too many show stoppers, in 3 years on a ZZR 1400 forum nobody complained about their bike leaving them stranded (a couple of punctures was all i have seen) maybe the forum was smaller, but generally the bikes do not let people down. I did 3 euro-tours on mine and had no worries about going away for 3,000 miles.

With the GS I am wondering if I need to carry an FPC and EWS and have the FD stripped and inspected before setting off, rightly or wrongly I am genuinely concerned this bike may ruin my holiday.

Similarly I am concerned I may regret buying the bike, I bought it because it was great fun and a wonderfully conceived machine, not so sure about reliable and well built, I am sure other owners and potential owners have similar concerns.

Even within this forum it is only really the 1200's that have this reputation and endless reliability threads, maybe it is not as bad as many people fear, but it is obviously worse than other BMW models and many Jap bikes.

For each person who defends it as being "as good as anything else" there is someone else who has been stranded more times in a short ownership period on a GS than on every other bike they have owned put together.

Maybe 95% are very reliable, but really the figure should be above 99%, EWS and FPC failures should have been resolved quickly with free parts to every owner, not still rumbling on 6 years after they were discovered.

The FD is obviously another big problem, but as other bikes do not suffer it must be down to the 1200 implementation or quality of components / assembly, again BMW should have resolved this in a lot less than 6 years and provide goodwill to any low mileage failures, and by low I mean under 60k as an FD should really last longer than 3 chains.

Cannot say if I am happy with bike yet, if after 12 months and a holiday I have no issues I would be happy, but if it then failed 3 times the following year I would not be chuffed.

Satisifaction can also be a moving target, I would expect the bike to last me another 5 years and hit 40k with no major troubles, even then I would not expect the FD to be buggered.

I will post back around 2015 with a definitive answer, but for now is it worth carrying an EWS and FPC when on tour?
 
i carry an FPC around out of habit. it's one that was swapped out, by the dealer FOC, as the part got upgraded.

never had to use it myself, but done thousands of miles in the company of multiple other 1200s, and did need to lend it out once.

EWS thing is pretty much sorted now AFAIK. i never worry about the final drive, or any of the other things i read about here.
 
Had a 2005 gs that kept having warning lights come up but never failed, and another 2005 gs that just about everything went wrong, sold it as "broken bike" wouldnt touch that year bike again, when they worked they were great.
 
Sad to say reliable is not a word I would connect to my first BMW experieince. in 12 months since buying a 2006 GS1200 from a main dealer with 35k miles on the clock the following joyfull experieinces have ensured

EWS Failure
Fuel Pump controller failure
Corrosion on from engine cover
Corrosion on all front wheel bolt heads
Corrosion on all bolt head on front calipers
Complete Failure of electrical system requiring repair to loom
Wonderful grinding sensation from rear wheel on cornering, no explanation from BMW as yet
Second failure of electrical system requiring new loom at cost of £1400 (2 days out of 12month warranty following purchase)
Failure of battery, replacement cost from BMW assist £110.00 currently attemntping to claim back as original battery tested and fine.....

BMW state electrical failure due to aftermarket alarm but this now resides on brothers 2006 GS1200 and has no problems, strange that.

Re corrosion, I have never used washing up liquid or wheel cleaner on the bike before anyone asks.

Sad to say that this is my first and probably last BMW bike I purchase ....:mad:
 
Most bikes have faults but not too many show stoppers, in 3 years on a ZZR 1400 forum nobody complained about their bike leaving them stranded (a couple of punctures was all i have seen) maybe the forum was smaller, but generally the bikes do not let people down. I did 3 euro-tours on mine and had no worries about going away for 3,000 miles.

?

I had a ZZR1400 when they came out and was on a USA based forum where many people were complaining about warped brake discs. I had the same problem and had calipers and discs replaced. The dealer tried to say that I was the first one with this problem until I pointed out that many others had it.
THey said the problem was that I was riding it in the winter and most people didn't!!!
It was only because I advised the dealer that I would take legal action if they didn't sort it that they contacted Kawasaki. The dealer not backing up a customer(me) meant that they lost a customer(me)
 
I had a K1200S that went back and forth to the dealers with problems of surging, cutting out, faulty battery .... I then had an F800GS that kept on cutting in and out which turned out to be a faulty side stand switch...
The R1200GS aniv that I bought a few weeks ago is due to have head bearings replaced ..

But at least the dealer Does sort things out
 
The R1200GS aniv that I bought a few weeks ago is due to have head bearings replaced ..

Mine (R1200GS 05/2009) has the same problem. Dealer will short it out at the 20000Km service under warranty.
 
Mine (R1200GS 05/2009) has the same problem. Dealer will short it out at the 20000Km service under warranty.
Mine has 610miles on clock but reported earlier than that. Still waiting for weather to change so I can take in for 1st service.
 
2006 1200 GS
57000 miles

Issues found when serviced.

1: 18000 miles Rear shock fooked. Replaced under warranty.

2: 56700 miles. Final Drive gone. Fixed by BMW as good faith.

Breakdowns

1: 42000 miles. Bottom of Stelvio Pass, FPC. Fixed in 15 minutes as we had a spare.

2: 48000 miles. 10 Mins from home. Alternator broke. Fixed under extended warranty



4 Dramas in 57k. I`m happy with that.:)
 
Lots of slack even after tightened .When you push the bike forward you can feel the movement, almost as if the bars are loose(which they are not)
 
Lots of slack even after tightened .When you push the bike forward you can feel the movement, almost as if the bars are loose(which they are not)

My dealer told me that it is the head bearing and that their is no hazard at all, just the feeling....I placed almost 4500Km with the issue and no problems at all so far.

On Friday (next week) I shall be in for the 20000Km service so they shall replace what ever is required.

I will inform you as soon as I get back the bike.
 
Sad to say reliable is not a word I would connect to my first BMW experieince. in 12 months since buying a 2006 GS1200 from a main dealer with 35k miles on the clock the following joyfull experieinces have ensured

EWS Failure
Fuel Pump controller failure
Corrosion on from engine cover
Corrosion on all front wheel bolt heads
Corrosion on all bolt head on front calipers
Complete Failure of electrical system requiring repair to loom
Wonderful grinding sensation from rear wheel on cornering, no explanation from BMW as yet
Second failure of electrical system requiring new loom at cost of £1400 (2 days out of 12month warranty following purchase)
Failure of battery, replacement cost from BMW assist £110.00 currently attemntping to claim back as original battery tested and fine.....

BMW state electrical failure due to aftermarket alarm but this now resides on brothers 2006 GS1200 and has no problems, strange that.

Re corrosion, I have never used washing up liquid or wheel cleaner on the bike before anyone asks.

Sad to say that this is my first and probably last BMW bike I purchase ....:mad:

I too bought a 2006 GS on a 56 plate with 30k miles second hand..... its not missed a beat! :)
 
GS 1150

Hi , has anyone experienced the conection on their stick coil starting to smoke
 
07 1200 GS bought brand new.
Here´s the list:
2K miles - odo sensor replaced
4K miles - FPC replaced
8k miles - fuel strip replaced
11k miles - FPC replaced again
17k miles - FD bearing replaced
22k miles - FD gasket replaced
25k miles - front suspension ball joint replaced
31k miles- rear wheel big bearing replaced
35k miles - rear wheel plate replaced
38k miles- FPC replaced again
Present (40k miles) - bike is surging, struggles to reach 60 mph, exhaust is popping, and has no power.
In my humble opinion the 1200 is not a reliable machine.
Cheers !
 
07 1200 GS bought brand new.
Here´s the list:
2K miles - odo sensor replaced
4K miles - FPC replaced
8k miles - fuel strip replaced
11k miles - FPC replaced again
17k miles - FD bearing replaced
22k miles - FD gasket replaced
25k miles - front suspension ball joint replaced
31k miles- rear wheel big bearing replaced
35k miles - rear wheel plate replaced
38k miles- FPC replaced again
Present (40k miles) - bike is surging, struggles to reach 60 mph, exhaust is popping, and has no power.
In my humble opinion the 1200 is not a reliable machine.
Cheers !

What was the surging problem all about?
 
My 2 pennorth...............

1996 R1100RT. 80k miles, three bearing collapses in the bevel box and a drive shaft sheared. Two clutches so far.

1999 R1100GS. 80k miles, about to need another clutch, snapped clutch operating lever - don't know what caused it?

2004 R1200GS. 85k miles, two gearbox rebuilds and two clutches, three oilseals on the bevel box (but bearings appear to be lasting). Servo ABS failed a couple of times, but reset of error codes seems to fix it. Also let down by a broken wire once.

2003 KTM 950 Adventure. 35k miles, snapped the rear exhaust pipe at about 20k miles, had a few problems with crapped up carbs due to leaving the bike standing over the winter.

1978 R100/7. 150k miles, started life as a R80/7, but had a serious exhaust valve, piston interface issue about 80k miles and was repaired with parts from a broken R100CS. Other than that, no serious problems.

Generally I find the big BMW twins great as bikes to ride, but don't feel ready to buy a new one at the moment.



Generally happy with them all as bikes to ride
 
1996 R1100RT. 80k miles, three bearing collapses in the bevel box and a drive shaft sheared. Two clutches so far.

1999 R1100GS. 80k miles, about to need another clutch, snapped clutch operating lever - don't know what caused it?

2004 R1200GS. 85k miles, two gearbox rebuilds and two clutches, three oilseals on the bevel box (but bearings appear to be lasting). Servo ABS failed a couple of times, but reset of error codes seems to fix it. Also let down by a broken wire once.

2003 KTM 950 Adventure. 35k miles, snapped the rear exhaust pipe at about 20k miles, had a few problems with crapped up carbs due to leaving the bike standing over the winter.

1978 R100/7. 150k miles, started life as a R80/7, but had a serious exhaust valve, piston interface issue about 80k miles and was repaired with parts from a broken R100CS. Other than that, no serious problems.

Generally I find the big BMW twins great as bikes to ride, but don't feel ready to buy a new one at the moment.



Generally happy with them all as bikes to ride

your mileage is pretty high :clap - I suspect most makes would struggle after 80k miles
 
Did 35k on a 2005, final drive, fpc, warped disc, two batteries and a weird ecu problem

just got scared to go out on it so moved on. Reading this thread I'm amazed the same old problems haven't been sorted

Not good enough really BWM, a great riding machine spoilt by lack of attention to detail and reluctance to pay a couple more quid for parts.

I now have a 2008 1100s multistrada which given Ducati's reputation for electrical problems etc was a risk but 20K later and not even a blown bulb and cheaper to run and service.

Almost as ugly as a 1200 too :eek:
 
your mileage is pretty high :clap - I suspect most makes would struggle after 80k miles

But they had all had major failures before 80k, I would not be bothered if things started going wrong beyond 80k, but several major failures from new to 80k is pretty poor, especially when clutches, gearboxes and drive trains all seem to fail repeatedly.

Not good enough and certainly puts me off another GS (or any other BMW for that matter) there are just more reliable bikes out there.

I know all bikes have issues, but with BMW it tends to be a lot of expensive items, the EWS / FPC issues are not so bad, most people can afford £100 to fix them, gearboxes, final drives and clutches I am guessing are all over £1k at stealer prices.
 


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