power2learn
Guest
If you are tempted to do a bit of fording / wading in the floodwaters, give it a second thought.
I went to go through a flooded road yesterday and ended up with a flooded GS. The bike stopped quickly, in water well below the cylinder heads, but it must have splashed up into the air intake.
I pushed the bike to dry land, called the RAC who took out the sparks and air filter, turned the bike over (spitting out all the water) and re-assembled. Bike started first time and sounded fine.
We left the bike running to dry out, and a while later I noticed that an oil/water mix was dripping from the engine. RAC suggested oil change / filter should sort. Local dealer agreed and reckoned £60-£70 should see it right.
Then it turned out a bolt had been forced out of the engine front plate, which was rethreaded & refitted. Copious oil changes and nearly £400 later I was back on the road at the end of the day.
Until the bike started pouring oil from the front engine plate all over the exhaust on the way home. (Suspect same bolt has failed again).
It could be just the bolt needs fixing; it could be more serious, possibly requiring an engine rebuild. Apparently these cost £5-£6k, which would write my high mileage 12GS off
So, if you are thinking of a little fording, even in relatively shallow water, I'd think twice. 9 out of 10 times, you may be just fine. But the 1 in 10 times it's a problem, it could see you in real trouble.
I went to go through a flooded road yesterday and ended up with a flooded GS. The bike stopped quickly, in water well below the cylinder heads, but it must have splashed up into the air intake.
I pushed the bike to dry land, called the RAC who took out the sparks and air filter, turned the bike over (spitting out all the water) and re-assembled. Bike started first time and sounded fine.
We left the bike running to dry out, and a while later I noticed that an oil/water mix was dripping from the engine. RAC suggested oil change / filter should sort. Local dealer agreed and reckoned £60-£70 should see it right.
Then it turned out a bolt had been forced out of the engine front plate, which was rethreaded & refitted. Copious oil changes and nearly £400 later I was back on the road at the end of the day.
Until the bike started pouring oil from the front engine plate all over the exhaust on the way home. (Suspect same bolt has failed again).
It could be just the bolt needs fixing; it could be more serious, possibly requiring an engine rebuild. Apparently these cost £5-£6k, which would write my high mileage 12GS off

So, if you are thinking of a little fording, even in relatively shallow water, I'd think twice. 9 out of 10 times, you may be just fine. But the 1 in 10 times it's a problem, it could see you in real trouble.

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