Delboy777
Registered user
Well there's a surprise, they shaft you when you buy one, sell you an inferior product for an exorbitant price, then shaft you again when it goes wrong ! They certainly have their business model well sorted.
Please! Of course no other make ever goes wrong and every other brand is so much better, surprising BMW haven't gone bankrupt.Well there's a surprise, they shaft you when you buy one, sell you an inferior product for an exorbitant price, then shaft you again when it goes wrong ! They certainly have their business model well sorted.
Please! Of course no other make ever goes wrong and every other brand is so much better, surprising BMW haven't gone bankrupt.
So Triumph never had weak 4th gears on their T595 range and plastic fuel couplings that snapped if you looked at them too hard (ultimately resulting in a recall after years of complaints), all rumour was it? Or the Sprint ST1050 where the rear drop links were subject to a recall as they had some snap which resulted in the rear wheel jamming into the subframe and locking up the rear wheel.
Or the wheel bearings on the single sided swinging arm could seize (my friend's did whilst we were on a trip in France), I know of another person who also had this happen, he wasn't so lucky both he and his wife were thrown down the road when the rear wheel seized. Triumph were crap at dealing with the issues, usually blaming the customer. All bike manufacturers have issues, I've yet to find one that is perfect...
I took the bike to mechanic who seems to know the 1200 engine fairly well.
He listened to it and said it was the clutch pressure plate. He had RT apart in his garage and showed me the problem. The steel disc in the center become lose and rattle like hell. The one I looked at was doing the same.
Now I just checked the price of a new pressure plate, and its scarry.
Maybe its that. But my clutch was taken out at 50K miles. Apart from being 1/3 worn there was nothing wrong. The gearbox rattled just the same. The input shaft bearing felt smooth and showed no signs of leaking seals.
I've taken out the clutch pushrod and the gearbox rattles just the same. I've even wound self amalgamating tape over the felt groove enough to make the pushrod stick. The rattle stays the same. It's not the pushrod.
My friend's Honda Jazz had a gearbox rattle in neutral that sounded VERY similar. An exchange gearbox solved the noise. The repair firm said it's the input shaft bearing. 11/1200 Fiats used to get the same problem. They got to the point where the input bearings would be changed when a clutch was replaced.
The solution is a replacement gearbox or a rebuild. Knowing BMW the bearings will all be 1mm off standard so only available from them at silly money prices. If the torque shock limiter is worn you may as well skip the whole lot.