Wednesday. The final day of the trip.
Woke up to blazing sunshine & this.

Once again the bike wouldn't start. You can see the temperature gauge is blank but the photo doesn't make it quite as clear that the petrol gauge is also blank.
Nothing. There was no starting her again. I was far more relaxed about it this time. I'm in a hotel, although I'm due home today I'm not actually due back at work until Monday. I wa actually pleasd that she finally appeared to have gicen uop the ghost once & for all. BMW can get it sorted.
I rang BMW breakdown recovery who were very good. They'd get the bike recovered to a dealer 30 miles away & depending on what he said I could either stay over at their expense until she was fixed or have a hire car to get me home. They would then either repatriate the bike to the UK for me or pay for me to go back & ride it home. So I had a nice leisurely breakfast & periodically checked the bike, bit there was no change.
Until an hour later when she started again. :argh2:
As we weren't due on the Chunnel until 1640 I decided this time I would go to the dealer & se what they had to say. The Sat Nav indicated it was on our route to the Chunnel anyway so it made sense. And off we set. South. 30 miles re-tracing our steps to Reims. FFS. TBH I wasn't too worried. The day was stunning, we were riding along the Chemin Des Dames,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemin_des_Dames,
which had some very interesting looking cemeteries & memorials (worthy of another visit some time) & our leisurely pace at the speed limit saw the bike hit the holy grail of over 60 MPG for the 1st time ever (60.8 in fact).
I got to the dealer & explained what had been hapening. He went to the starter button & instantly recreated the problem by hitting the kill switch.
It would appear that the switch is faulty & engaging the kill position, even when moving it to the start position.
This looked like good news. I explained the situatio to BMW recovery who were happy to pay for my stay in the very hot & suny Champagnbe capital of France until the bike was fixed. Result!
Or not. The dealer then eplxined that there is a backlog of requests for starter buttons in bithe Germany & France & no idea when hey will be vailable. Call me a cynic but this suggest to me I'm not the only one who's had this problem.
The dealer assured me that there was no way, once the bike was going, that the kill switch would engage & the bike was safe to ride. So off we went on our final leg of the trip.
A quick coffee stop & fill up with petrol, 50 miles before Calais, and the bike wouldn't start again. Same problem. Arse.
I rang BMW Assist who said that they couldn't arrange recovery as I was on the French Autoroute network & all recoveries are handled by a company appointed by the French Authorities. I had to ring 112, arrange or them to recover the bike (BMW would foot the bill for this) then BMW would arrange recovery from that company's depot to the dealer.
So I rang 112 & was told there would be someone along within 30 minutes.
I decided to give the bike another go. Result! the temperature gauge & fuel gauge were working. But she still wouldn't start. This was a new twist. Double arse! Switch it off, try again, no better. And again. No better.
Then I realised. She was in gear. FFS! Into neutral & we were sorted. I rang 112 again who seemed bemused hat I'd rung to cancel, took no details whatsoever & simply wished me 'Bonne Route'.
We had decided that we would take the earliest option available to us when we got to the Chunnel. We checked in, me in 1 lane, Simon in the one alongside & filtered into passport control. He's taken the earliest option available, crossing at 1550 & so had I, only my earliest option was for 1640. Great. Lesson learnt. In future both check in at the same lane. I did ask as Simon went off towards the train if I could hop on alongside him but was given a very firm ' Non'. Fair enough, no harm in asking. We decided to meet up at Folkestone services on the other side, that way I could get some snap in France, he could get something to eat in the UK.
And then the trip ended in a way that kind of typified the journey. I went to join the boarding queue & we sat there. And sat there. And sat there. We were delayed for about an hour as the had & I am quoting directly here 'lost a train with 100 vehicles on'. Now, how you lose a train when it's only going along 1 track & back is quite a mystery to me. I suspect they'd had a breakdown but who knows. They certainly weren't keeping us enlightened.
I did get chatting to a few of the other passengers whilst waiting though.
