technotony007
Registered user
i will look after the members of this forum and discount groups![]()
Please include for group day discount , for a re-Mapp.... nice one geoff.
Please just give me the heads up on were and when.
regards
Tony

i will look after the members of this forum and discount groups![]()

Serious questions:
How can some bloke in a garage improve on what BMW sell you for about £13k?
Why if it is this easy to improve the bike don't the top designers and engineers at BMW do it in the factory?
Don't you think that the bike you spend £13k on should be as good as it can be when you have it delivered?
It's not so much that he's improving on what BMW has made, more that he's restoring the original design intent. BMW took the DOHC engine from the HP2 Sport (where it made in excess of 130bhp), and 'retuned' it to make 110bhp. This is the same kind of retuning that Honda regularly does, taking Fireblade engines and sticking them in naked bikes with 30 - 40bhp knocked off, supposedly to 'improve the midrange response', but really just so you don't buy the cheap bike instead of the top of the range one.
A good example of this sort of 'marketing engineering' is the 1.9TDi engine that the VAG group use. This was (is?) available in all states of tune, from 120 to 170bhp, depending if you bought a VW Polo or Golf, Seat Ibiza, Audi A3 or A4... it's a long list, and it's one of the reasons that the engine is very popular with remap-ers, because you can change software parameters and get massive bhp improvements. VAG adjust the output depending on where they want to pitch the car within the range. For instance, the 2006 diesel Polo made 130bhp max, as they didn't want it to make more than the Polo GTi (150bhp) or the Golf TDi (170bhp). But a remap can take it to 160bhp+, no problem.
Looking at the power curve for my GS remap, peak power was 80bhp at 6,000rpm, after which it flatlined all the way to the limiter. After the remap, it makes 105bhp 500rpm short of the redline, and has a power curve that looks like it was originally supposed to, before some marketing strategist got hold of it and chopped the top off.
I just got my wife a new 1.6 TDi Polo. Maybe Geoff can remap more power and torque for her ?
Please include for group day discount , for a re-Mapp.... nice one geoff.
Please just give me the heads up on were and when.
regards
Tony![]()

It's not so much that he's improving on what BMW has made, more that he's restoring the original design intent. BMW took the DOHC engine from the HP2 Sport (where it made in excess of 130bhp), and 'retuned' it to make 110bhp. This is the same kind of retuning that Honda regularly does, taking Fireblade engines and sticking them in naked bikes with 30 - 40bhp knocked off, supposedly to 'improve the midrange response', but really just so you don't buy the cheap bike instead of the top of the range one.
A good example of this sort of 'marketing engineering' is the 1.9TDi engine that the VAG group use. This was (is?) available in all states of tune, from 120 to 170bhp, depending if you bought a VW Polo or Golf, Seat Ibiza, Audi A3 or A4... it's a long list, and it's one of the reasons that the engine is very popular with remap-ers, because you can change software parameters and get massive bhp improvements. VAG adjust the output depending on where they want to pitch the car within the range. For instance, the 2006 diesel Polo made 130bhp max, as they didn't want it to make more than the Polo GTi (150bhp) or the Golf TDi (170bhp). But a remap can take it to 160bhp+, no problem.
Looking at the power curve for my GS remap, peak power was 80bhp at 6,000rpm, after which it flatlined all the way to the limiter. After the remap, it makes 105bhp 500rpm short of the redline, and has a power curve that looks like it was originally supposed to, before some marketing strategist got hold of it and chopped the top off.
Interesting piece here from the Triumph Explorer press launch by Kevin Ash. Triumph reveal that the GS's mapping is frigged for press bikes because journalists prefer more top end. This would imply that BMW shift the power down the range either because they think that it sells better and/or to improve reliability/longevity and/or reduce emissions. Unfortunately they appear to make a crap job of it and jeopardise reliability by making the mixture too lean.
If it sounds weird that a large, well funded, experienced business can make a mess of something that they should be able to get spot on, consider the standard screen, seat and final drive etc...
And me - lets have a GS (and RT) day or weekend![]()

Interested to hear if the improved smoothness means a cure for the vibration above 5000 revs, or maybe not all bikes have this? The remap sounds like a no brainer to me as my GS is not as free revving as I think it should be, and vibrates enough to blur the mirrors above 5000 revs.
make all changes before i remap it ,just a quick note i am away from 7th july to 13th july so im in on sat 14th![]()
Interesting piece here from the Triumph Explorer press launch by Kevin Ash. Triumph reveal that the GS's mapping is frigged for press bikes because journalists prefer more top end. This would imply that BMW shift the power down the range either because they think that it sells better and/or to improve reliability/longevity and/or reduce emissions. Unfortunately they appear to make a crap job of it and jeopardise reliability by making the mixture too lean.
If it sounds weird that a large, well funded, experienced business can make a mess of something that they should be able to get spot on, consider the standard screen, seat and final drive etc...
