As an 1150 owner looking to trade in later this year against a 1200GSA, a 1200GS-owning friend has just given me this tale of woe. His bike is about 15 months old. I'm not sure of the mileage (the warranty mention will give a clue to those who know):-
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A small oil weep was found by CW at the rear surface of the engine when it had a service a couple of weeks ago. Good news and bad. The good news is that BMW will pick up the bill as it is (just) still under warranty, the bad news is that they need it for two days, so I took it down today and get it back on Friday. Running around on an F650GS loan bike now.
Why?
Engine oil seal has gone which they say almost inevitably means there will
be oil on the clutch, so as well as a seal, a complete new clutch assy is
waiting in the workshop to 2007 spec (different friction material, different
operating rod, and different housing). And while it is in it is having a
new clutch master cylinder as the original has a slight weep.
(and THEN....):-
Got the bike back this morning. It's a good job that BMW is paying as (to add to your concern) CW found another problem.
I asked that they change the final drive oil in the allegedly sealed for life unit. While the back end was dismantled that would be a very easy job. Normally c/o the crazy designers it is not so simple. Where is the drain plug? Answer, it doubles as the fill plug, so to empty the unit, it has to be dropped through 90 degrees. So, when they dropped the unit they found the shaft drive splines badly worn, ditto the final drive splines, and the back end of the shaft rusted. They had never seen it before and fortunately BMW sprung for a new drive shaft and a complete final drive assembly. CW will now advise that 1200 owners should consider adding a shaft drive check to service schedules.
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now I know that this may be a one-off, but as an experience of a friend it does leave me a bit disconcerted
.... I've had nearly five years incident-free running from my 1150GS
So, 1200 lovers, should I be worried? Anyone think I should hang on to the 1150?
***************************************
A small oil weep was found by CW at the rear surface of the engine when it had a service a couple of weeks ago. Good news and bad. The good news is that BMW will pick up the bill as it is (just) still under warranty, the bad news is that they need it for two days, so I took it down today and get it back on Friday. Running around on an F650GS loan bike now.
Why?
Engine oil seal has gone which they say almost inevitably means there will
be oil on the clutch, so as well as a seal, a complete new clutch assy is
waiting in the workshop to 2007 spec (different friction material, different
operating rod, and different housing). And while it is in it is having a
new clutch master cylinder as the original has a slight weep.
(and THEN....):-
Got the bike back this morning. It's a good job that BMW is paying as (to add to your concern) CW found another problem.
I asked that they change the final drive oil in the allegedly sealed for life unit. While the back end was dismantled that would be a very easy job. Normally c/o the crazy designers it is not so simple. Where is the drain plug? Answer, it doubles as the fill plug, so to empty the unit, it has to be dropped through 90 degrees. So, when they dropped the unit they found the shaft drive splines badly worn, ditto the final drive splines, and the back end of the shaft rusted. They had never seen it before and fortunately BMW sprung for a new drive shaft and a complete final drive assembly. CW will now advise that 1200 owners should consider adding a shaft drive check to service schedules.
********************************************
now I know that this may be a one-off, but as an experience of a friend it does leave me a bit disconcerted
So, 1200 lovers, should I be worried? Anyone think I should hang on to the 1150?


BMW had a quality rep but charged twice as much for their bikes as the then main manufacturers (British). Nowadays they charge not a lot more and tbh the quality isnt any better than the competition either. You get fretting on the drive splines - so do Honda on the Pan Euro. You get paint lifting on the GS - so do Honda on the Pan Euro. You get the idea - but the big difference is the GS grin factor. It might not be the worlds most reliable bike (I'd take some convincing the 1150 was any better) but its a bloo*y good ride. Its a contender for being the worlds most useable fun bike.