But you (and I suspect you're not alone) can't even show enough decency towards Nemezis to admit that he was right and raised a very important issue.
I suggest you try actually reading my post.

But you (and I suspect you're not alone) can't even show enough decency towards Nemezis to admit that he was right and raised a very important issue.

Had brake failure yesterday on the way home from work. No warning just sudden lever back to the bars and very low brake effort. Fortunately this was on a quiet industrial estate, pulled in and found brake fluid leaking down from under the tank. Not a good sign on any bike but especially on a 2 month old, 2k miles machine!
BMW assist arrived within the hour and we stripped the bike between us and found one of the steel lines to the ABS block was fractured or pin holed and leaking badly. All the unions were tight so it looks like there is a flaw in the pipe itself which has blown out. Bike and me eventually taken home by recovery service, currently awaiting the transport to turn up this morning to take it back the the dealers (Southport).
Any body had a similar experience? The strange thing was I was only braking gently when the failure occured. After the running in period I gave the brakes a really good work out practicing E-stops hard enough to lift the back wheel but never had any poblems or subsequently any fluid level drop noted during pre-ride checks.
I guess the only good thing is that it happened now and not on our hols due in a couple of weeks. The consequences of a similar failure 2-up and luggaged on an Alpine pass are a sobering thought.
Had brake failure yesterday on the way home from work.
You were lucky to get away with a scare Martin,
You were lucky to get away with a scare Martin,
A cracked/ruptured brake line is a safety issue and can happen on ANY type of system - ABS - modulated or not. To say it NEVER happens on non ABS systems is clearly not true! I know because I have had a line rupture on a non-ABS bike, yes it was years ago but it was a new bike at the time. To call regular brakes "perfect" implies no chance for failure.
I remember when the motorcycle companies started to eliminated cables & rods and went to hydraulics, there were those that did not trust the "NEW" technology because there were failures like ruptured o-rings stuck calipers etc... I have also broken brake cables and rods in my years of riding. The fact that the hydraulic brakes helped you stop in 1/2 the distance and became reliable eventually converted everyone
Having owned ABS and non-ABS bikes I believe ABS will save 10x the number of people than they would potentially put in danger.
Should all defects be fixed - yes.
MHO
Dave

I guess that it won't effect the system too much as there is flexi hose going to your calipers.



Nemesis, if ABS is so bad then all the other manufacturers who are fitting it must be wrong too![]()
sorry guys, here is my opinion (please don't take it personally, it's just my personal opinion):...............just my opinion.
sorry guys, here is my opinion (please don't take it personally, it's just my personal opinion):
if somebody is so ****ed up when it comes to riding a motorcycle that his fun with riding a bike and life depends on a motorcycle-ABS, he should stop riding and try something else like taking a walk or taking a taxi.
as I said before ABS on motorcycles is dangerous:
1. FTE automotive: residual brakes
2. Continental Teves: cracking pipes
Sorry mate, you're just plain wrong. Even experienced racers won't beat ABS in a one off bad conditions / emergency situation. Yes of course they will on the track but that is because they have pretty consistant conditions and can practice braking harder and harder. Real life ain't like that and I for one am happy to admit I'm not superman.
With regard to ABS being dangerous, both your examples relate to poor engineering design they have nothing to do with the concept of ABS being flawed.
I wonder what the mean time between failure is for our particular fractured pipe fault. I.E. no. of units in service x miles covered / no. of failures? BMW may not be behaving well here but neither are they stupid. There is no doubt they will have assessed risk (to their business, not the rider, I'm not naive) vs. cost to recall and rectify. They must see the risk as low. I know this is morally questionable but it is the reality of the consumerist & litigious socoety we live in.
They must see the risk as low.
1. residual brakes are legal, no recall
2. cracking pipes and loss of one braking circuit is legal, no recall
brake failure 1 and 2 do only happen with ABS-brakes, not with perfect regular brakes. You end up with 1/4 of braking efficiency. that's legal.
result: ABS-brakes are dangerous,
perfect regular brakes are safe.
It's like saying planes can crash so planes are dangerous.
I'm guessing the back brake would still work.
How naive can you get? Do you really think that your system can not fail? It may not be likely but it can happen. Maybe not the precise fault but there are documented instances of line failure on GSs giving no residual braking at all - I'd rather have 25% efficiency thanks.These faults with the ABS brakes in question cannot ever happen to perfect regular brakes.