Peter Reilly
Guest
There I was in the middle of a 5 lane motorway outrside Antwerp when the bike died completely. Everything went, engine, lights, instruments. I coasted to a halt in lane 3 just ahead of an artic who luckily stopped as well. My mate was behind me on another 1200GS and had the presence of mind to put his hazard flashers on. We got over to the hard shoulder in one piece and called BMW assistance. I had taken out the year 3 warranty which includes european breakdown cover. The battery appeared to be completely dead. When I turned the ignition on, the LCD panel came on but when I pressed the starter button, all that happened was that the LCD panel went blank.
2 hours later and we are at the local BMW dealer. The dealer tried a new battery and the bike started immediately. The mechanic said that the old battery had probably had an internal short circuit and suffered immediate and total failure. Interesting to think that if I had servo brakes, they would have died too...
The mechanic said that battery failure was not uncommon, which is not exactly reassuring. I now have a new BMW battery (€142!) and am tempted to swap it for an Odyssey. The bike had done 14,000 miles and there were no warning signs that the battery was on the way out.
2 hours later and we are at the local BMW dealer. The dealer tried a new battery and the bike started immediately. The mechanic said that the old battery had probably had an internal short circuit and suffered immediate and total failure. Interesting to think that if I had servo brakes, they would have died too...
The mechanic said that battery failure was not uncommon, which is not exactly reassuring. I now have a new BMW battery (€142!) and am tempted to swap it for an Odyssey. The bike had done 14,000 miles and there were no warning signs that the battery was on the way out.



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