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New project. BMW R100S

Discussion in 'Other Motorcycles' started by alaskazzr, Nov 2, 2010.

  1. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    Since I just got back to Alaska after a 5500 mile journey across the lower 48, I have become enamored with BMW motorcycles (I rode my 2010 R1200GS Adventure on the trip). See here for ride report and pictures of trip: http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=625022

    So, seeing that it's winter here now, I picked up a new project. It's my good friend's old 1982 BMW R100S. He layed it down last summer and wanted it out of his garage.

    $500 and it joins my other 5 bikes. It's starting to get crowded around here.
    [​IMG]

    I'm not positive if I am going to retain the "S" look with the bullet fairing, or go in a different direction a la "RT" or no fairing at all. Also, since VINs on BMW's do not dictate trim level or color, I have some liberty with changing the color up while still keeping it accurate.
     
  2. mlew

    mlew Well-Known Member

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    That bike looks great, not much of a project to restore it. I don't see any major dammage. What are your plans for it? 500$ was a steal.
     
  3. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    After pricing "S" fairings, I kind of just want to go with a naked headlight, and maybe just a little flyscreen above it for wind when I ride to work on it. The paint I want is a late '70's scheme of red with black smoke like this: http://www.flickr.com/photos/suzukiman/ ... /lightbox/

    The only damage to the bike is a quarter in diameter and 1/2" deep dent on the top of the tank where the controls made contact; the right muffler is crumpled and unusable; the handlebars, controls, headlight, fairing, and instruments were sheared off and unrecoverable; and the forks are twisted up. Other than that it's all there and ready for unbolt-bolt on restoration.

    I'll probably gather all the parts, assemble the bike, get it running well, then disassemble everything down to frame and clean, polish, and repaint everything as I reassemble it.
     
  4. schooter

    schooter Active Member

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    wow what a trip.

    i really like bmw cafe racers....
     
  5. Kickaha

    Kickaha Active Member Premium Member

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    I've not long bought a 1977 R100RS which I will be turning into a Pre82 race bike, but it cost more and wasn't as tidy, good score you got there
     
  6. wizard

    wizard Active Member

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    But they are not propper motorbikes, are they...
     
  7. Polock

    Polock Well-Known Member

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    civilized would be a good term
     
  8. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    Why the heck not?

    Ever since watching Dave Aldana (back in the '80s sometime) wheelieing his R100RS BOTT (Battle of the Twins, a sadly defunct American series) racebike out of a chicane and all the way up a short chute into the next corner, I've been convinced that BMW knows their stuff.

    Have you seen this http://www.totalmotorcycle.com/photos/2 ... 2Sport.htm latest iteration of the flat twin? OMG.

    Wait until you see the 1500cc inline-four that's on the horizon from them; when that thing comes out all the Japs can just go home. You'll see.

    The only reason I don't have a Bimmer in the barn is dollars, period. No way I could afford to feed and house three of them.
     
  9. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    So I was just reading the specs of the BMW HP2 Sport; 1170ccs, 133hp at 9500rpm from a flat twin... them's XJ revs! And it's a 6-speed!

    Anybody got a spare $25 large just laying around?
     
  10. BillB

    BillB Active Member

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    Im Jealous !!!
     
  11. wamaxim

    wamaxim Active Member

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    Fitz, do you mean the new in-line 6 cylinder? People, with a lot more money than me, are going nuts over the thing!

    Loren
     
  12. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    It's a SIX??? I gotta go back and find that article...
     
  13. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    Yeah as far as I know it's a 6. and 1600cc not 1500. K1600GT was the moniker if I remember the crosstalk on ADVRider.com.
    Edit: here's an article about it: http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/616/7370/ ... -Look.aspx

    I certainly believe that the BMW is a proper motorbike. I wouldn't think of anything else to go transcontinental on.

    Also the current generation R1200GS Adventure is basically an HP2 motor anymore, the 2010+ bike have the heads from the HP2. When we were traveling across Texas last month, the bike would settle in nicely around 100mph with full baggage and 2up. Dropping a gear and twisting WFO @ 70mph would yield huge power wheelies. Good times.

    Picture of a chilly morning in Tellico Plains TN
    [​IMG]
     
  14. schooter

    schooter Active Member

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    yep another inline 6 coming out, im sure rich beemer coffee cup holer mounted to handle bars guys have serious butt hurt for one

    but not you alaska, you still have an xj, which cost less than beemer guy's gps'
     
  15. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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  16. jeffhestand

    jeffhestand Member

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    i cannot believe the luck of some people! I read about another fella that got 2 gold wings both with titles for free! Well, there nothing like early BMW's. I'm jealous too!
    jeff
     
  17. clipperskipper

    clipperskipper Member

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    There's a guy over in the Penton group Kip who just got into the BMW Adventure series.
     
  18. XJ4Keeps

    XJ4Keeps Member

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    The original style fairing added the touch of elegance that made the old "S" airheads so cool, IMO. You should be able to find something on FleaBay that won't bust your budget. You only laid out five bills for the bike, AKZ. Why not splurge a little?

    By the way, other than the Roundel badge and a torque advantage low in the RPM band, what's an R100s have that a Seca 650 doesn't?

    Just defending my marque, dude. It's an XJ forum, after all. :lol:
     
  19. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    Two fewer carbs.
     
  20. lostboy

    lostboy Well-Known Member

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    BMW means

    Bring
    Money
    With you
     
  21. Polock

    Polock Well-Known Member

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    if you have to ask, you wouldn't understand
     
  22. XJ4Keeps

    XJ4Keeps Member

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    And if you understand, you aren't afraid to ask. I liked my '86 R80 a lot, but I have never regretted selling it. I missed the Seca 650 enough to go back to it twice, and I plan to keep my current bike until one of us dies. But that's just me.

    Look, I don't want to hijack the OP's thread, here. He got a sweet deal on a fine motorcycle that's going to be a ton of fun to restore and ride, and that's the bottom line.

    Go for it, AK, and keep us apprised of your progress. I hope you fall in love as hard as I have.
     
  23. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    Well, as far as the R bike vs. the Seca, I have a Seca and an R bike. I'm an equal opportunity owner and wrencher.

    I appreciate the Seca for the XJ "ride me off a cliff, pick me back up, and ride me home" reliability, the cheap and easy to find parts for it, and this amazing forum for tips, tricks, and support.

    After riding my R1200GSA across country, I really found an appreciation for the quirky BMW's. The parts of course are more expensive and harder to find, but I really dig their over engineering and function over form.
     
  24. XJ4Keeps

    XJ4Keeps Member

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    Well said, ZZR. Different bikes find their way in to different hearts for all kinds of different reasons, and that's a big part of their overall appeal. There are no "bad" bikes, only those that don't suit the owners' needs and/or sensibilities.
    By the way, I'm surprised to read that you've had a lot of trouble with your 'Strom. The owners I've talked to swear by them, not at them. What's up with yours?
     
  25. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    My V-Strom came to me from a fellow Alaskan rider who rode the proverbial balls off the thing. That being said, the bike's true condition only became evident well after I had purchased it.

    The valve clearances were checked and adjusted a week or so before I bought the bike @ ~25,000 miles. At 28,550 I had to re-accomplish the valve clearances due to a massive loss of compression from the valves seats receding into the head, although I didn't know that at the time. At 32,250 the bike again wouldn't start due to the valve clearances loosening up so much. At this point I started digging around at the local dealerships about this particular bike's history, and find out that it had thrown the rear timing chain and had all the parts associated with that replaced around 15,000 miles. There was about half a dozen major other things that were corrected over its lifetime as well.

    Long story short, I was blindsided by essential lies of omission from the original owner, and now it's my burden to correct them.

    I have bought a set of heads with 211 miles on them from an SV1000 that I am in the middle of swapping on to my motor. Along with them I have new head gaskets, timing chains, tensioners, and chain guides.
    Gratuitous picture of said heads:
    [​IMG]

    Once I get it all buttoned back up I plan to work any bugs out of it and promptly sell it. I cannot justify having it in the garage alongside a pair of 2010 R1200GSA's (both mine and my dad's are ending up in my garage here next June). Plus my wife has her eye on the F650GS.
     
  26. wamaxim

    wamaxim Active Member

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    alaskazzr, check www.beemerboneyard.com for the parts you need to put your airhead back together. Dang it! I want an R bike to go with my K bike! $500! Dang it again!

    I'd love to find a decent RT for lighter weight 1 up touring.

    Loren
     
  27. alaskazzr

    alaskazzr Member

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    thanks!
     
  28. XJ4Keeps

    XJ4Keeps Member

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    Yikes! You have to work pretty hard to lunch one of those motors after only 15K unless there was some kind of serious factory defect, which is rare for just about any bike these days, let alone a Suzuki.
    The PO must have not only ascribed new meaning to "riding the balls off the thing", he must have also neglected to do any preventative maintenance whatsoever. Shame on him for destroying a perfectly good motorcycle--x10 for passing the fruits of his idiocy on to you without any kind of a heads-up.
    This is the kind of thing that makes one wish that what goes around does, indeed, come around. Here's hoping that your experience with the new Airhead will more than offset the 'Strom debacle, and that the sh**bag who sold you the Zuke finds himself stranded in some really nasty place when his next bike blows up.
     
  29. JeffK

    JeffK Well-Known Member

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    Congrats on the new ride, for a traitor to the Strom, you've done well<LOL>! I also was surprised to see "money pit" in your sig since mine has been so bulletproof for the past 3 years.

    Like XJ4 said, it's hard to scrap one of those engines, especially in only 15K. I bought mine new and checked the valves at 12k and 2 were a tiny bit tight. It has 17K on it now and I need to replace it's original chain and front tire. I love the bike and like you, mod my bikes to suit how I ride that particular bike. I've run it hard a few times but with my other bikes, I have no reason to try to make the Strom a "racer" so hopefully, it will last forever. It's a great touring bike now with my changes but it's also a physically large machine. I'm 6' tall and 190 but hate big, heavy bikes. What's really an eyeopener is to go for a ride on my Vee, then take the RD350 out for a while......feels like I'm riding a bicycle!!

    Anyway, enjoy your beemer rebuild and ride safe......

    jeff
     

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