You are tenacious. It never will. Because it will a. Make the engine longer, b. Make the cylinder offset greater, and c. It doesn't need it anyway.May the lust for Boxers never die ! Hope the next one will have a crankshaft with 3 bearings ! Mittellager is the word…LOL
… the love for Boxers is my happy place like as a kid when my dad bought me a new bicycle every 6 month or so…So when after 11 long years I remember when the then all new LC came out the goal post gets not moved as much as you wanted you get slightly disappointed…




Thats the point YOU dont.So you are saying the GS with 10 hp more and a 24 instead of a 19 liter tank would have been not as good ? I dont think so !


Can we all agree with Boxerlust and move on? He is correct on all the items BMW should have done......it is amazing how he hits the nail on the head. and is so complete......bravo Boxerlust.There are lots of areas in the world where 150 miles tank range when you give it the berries dont cut it…OK it is probably no secret that BMW will bring another ADV with a BIG tank but then you have to go with a really big bike which is good or bad depending how big you are…24 liters would have been a great compromise and there were days at BMW when you got choose if you were a urban rider with a small bladder and smoking habit and you could either get a 17 or 24 liter tank…Hint,hint…I guess now it is 19 or 30 liters which is too big or still 4 liters too small on your once in a lifetime trip to Ushuaia…As for the power 149 NM are great but in combination with the taller gearing maybe the shorter geared 1250 might feel stronger…And 145 hp is nothing to write home about nowadays as 155 would be psychologically a much nicer number and step up from 136 hp but maybe BMW is going back to the 2 tier or even 3 tier engine configuration like in the days when the GS had 80 the others 90 and the S 98 hp…Hope remains the M1300GS will get a 17 instead of 21 inch front wheel and will be the XR version of the GS for people who prefer a boxer twin - Telelever & driveshaft over a 205 hp M-XR or 180 hp MS-RS…! Time will tell…Surprised nobody has commented about the foot brake that is linked to the front brake and if it can be deleted in pro modes !?
Also it seems the new bike seems stable at high speed as you can go 140/225 top speed instead experiencing the death wobble with bags & topcase at speed from 125/200 on…
I cant believe the R18 powertrain designers put an unnecessary bearing in the engine.ChazzyB…You probably know the crankshaft with mittellager/3 bearings is wasted on the R18…On a smaller boxer it could mean the engine could turn up to 10500 rpm and put the new 1390 from team orange to shame…LOL
I mean, technically, you've been riding a flat twin engine rather than a true boxer engine this whole time anyway since the pistons are on the same crankpin. So you're really just aching for that true boxer experience that you've never had on a GS.It is very necessary to protect the engine case and crankshaft from destruction through flexing caused by big heavy pistons or high rpm like 9000 rpm plus on a twin…A triple bearing crank would have looked less symmetric but would have given the new boxer more potential for more performance at the cost of a little more friction…A small price to pay.Still wonder how much weight a aluminum frame instead of the F series welded pressed steel frame would have saved at what additional cost and surprised that nobody had commented on the fact that the foot brake activates the front discs now…Wonder how you are supposed to do a tight circle at steering lock holding the bike on the rear brake otherwise I dont care since I never use the rear brake or better the bike does it for me using the brake lever at the handlebar…
What?I mean, technically, you've been riding a flat twin engine rather than a true boxer engine this whole time anyway since the pistons are on the same crankpin. So you're really just aching for that true boxer experience that you've never had on a GS.![]()
Just saying that 'technically' if the pistons are on the same crank pin the engine isn't considered a true boxer, rather it's a flat engine. He bangs on about this magic third bearing which would actually put the pistons on separate crank pins and therefore transform it into a 'true' boxer. Just poking fun because of some technicalities and his broken record posts.What?
if you're an experienced rider im sure you will work it out in about 1 nanosecond, it is probably minimal brake pressure at the front but allows use of rear braking to stabilise the bike at speed and scrub off a bit of speed if required. You've said it yourself you never use the rear brake, maybe this addresses one of the reasons why.It is very necessary to protect the engine case and crankshaft from destruction through flexing caused by big heavy pistons or high rpm like 9000 rpm plus on a twin…A triple bearing crank would have looked less symmetric but would have given the new boxer more potential for more performance at the cost of a little more friction…A small price to pay.Still wonder how much weight a aluminum frame instead of the F series welded pressed steel frame would have saved at what additional cost and surprised that nobody had commented on the fact that the foot brake activates the front discs now…Wonder how you are supposed to do a tight circle at steering lock holding the bike on the rear brake otherwise I dont care since I never use the rear brake or better the bike does it for me using the brake lever at the handlebar…