Sooty09
Registered user
I suppose it had to happen eventually given the amount of time I spend riding and the rough nature of my road choice, last weekend I dropped my bike while stationary on a tight up hill bend.
It happens and on my last few bikes caused quite a lot of damage.
Dropping the GS800 took out a tank panel, badge, two indicators, mirror, broke the radiator mounting lugs and damaged a steering stop on the frame.
My 2012 GS1200 was nudged over in a car park and rolled over damaging the cylinder guard, rocker box, tank panel and badge, top box, screen, mirror, hand guard and pillion foot peg.
All these were while almost stationary. Not all scrapped but showed signs of damage.
My LC has BMW engine guards and the only damage is a scratch on the crash bar and a couple of scratches on the mirror and top box. I'm quite impressed at the crash design of this bike. The crash bars are flexible, the rubber bungs pressed into the rocker cover and left a mark (rubbed off) but sprang back into shape. Less impressive is a small bit of plastic on the Bevel box has been damaged, not enough to cause a problem but shows just how close it was and could be very serious in other circumstances.
So this drop has cost nothing to fix, but to be sure for the future I'm fitting a bevel box pivot point crash bung.
It happens and on my last few bikes caused quite a lot of damage.
Dropping the GS800 took out a tank panel, badge, two indicators, mirror, broke the radiator mounting lugs and damaged a steering stop on the frame.
My 2012 GS1200 was nudged over in a car park and rolled over damaging the cylinder guard, rocker box, tank panel and badge, top box, screen, mirror, hand guard and pillion foot peg.
All these were while almost stationary. Not all scrapped but showed signs of damage.
My LC has BMW engine guards and the only damage is a scratch on the crash bar and a couple of scratches on the mirror and top box. I'm quite impressed at the crash design of this bike. The crash bars are flexible, the rubber bungs pressed into the rocker cover and left a mark (rubbed off) but sprang back into shape. Less impressive is a small bit of plastic on the Bevel box has been damaged, not enough to cause a problem but shows just how close it was and could be very serious in other circumstances.
So this drop has cost nothing to fix, but to be sure for the future I'm fitting a bevel box pivot point crash bung.
. I was surprised at how easily the cover was punctured - not cracked, just pushed in, with a hole at the bottom of the dent. It wasn't a disaster as I fixed the hole with some gaffer tape and that worked fine at stopping any more oil loss over the next 80 miles of riding. 
)