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| Danny |
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 Danny Ask Me About Stoppie School

Joined: 26 Jan 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 20:10 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: Servo Assisted Brakes - Safety Announcement |
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This is a safety announcement that all applies to any bike with servo assisted brakes.
Never, ever, buy a bike with these brakes, they are imo extremely dangerous as I found out earlier today.
While riding my BMW K1200R to work this morning I started to approach a roundabout and as normal applied the brakes.
A split second after I applied the brakes the ignition key turned itself to the off position.
This meant that I only had 'residual braking' as the servo assist doesn't work when the ignition is off.
At best, 'residual braking' gives you 25% of your normal braking power.
I very luckily managed to avoid the cars on the roundabout and eventually stopped in the middle of the roundabout.
I later found out that on my bike and possibly others, a small electrical fault such as a loose brake light wire can cause the ignition to turn off or reset.
NB. the bike did the same thing in November, but I thought it must be a 1 in a billion chance of it happening so just ignored it.
Servo assisted brakes are pointless anyway, as a normal good quality calliper can easily stop a big bike with one finger.
So people. please don't buy these stupid bikes, they are death-traps!
So much so, that BMW are phasing these brakes out.
The Rest of My Day:
After my own bike trying and failing to kill me, a cabbie thought he'd try and kill me too by pulling out on me 5mins later.
I called BMW Breakdown when I got into the office and asked for recovery to my dealer, they said they have to send out a technician first.
He arrived 11am, then proceeded to call me a liar (not in so many words) on two separate occasions. He eventually agreed to get a recovery truck.
BMW Breakdown quoted me a time of 1:30pm for the recovery truck to arrive.
I called the free breakdown policy I got with my E-Bike insurance and they were there within the hour.
When I got to BMW Oxford I dealt with the head of after-sales who was extremely helpful and did everything in his power to help me.
This included lending me a helmet as I'd forgotten mine at work.
Giving me a R1200GS as a loan bike; I should have gone for the F650 as the R1200GS is FAR to tall for me.
The tip of my boots only just touch the ground; also I think the bike may actually be taller than me
He also gave me a discount on a pair of gloves.
I have to say that I was and still am very shaken by this experience, I can deal with people pulling out on me etc.. but not my brakes randomly failing.  |
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| ..... |
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 ..... Quote Me Happy
Joined: 15 Jan 2005 Karma :   
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

Joined: 21 Apr 2004 Karma :     
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| mr.z |
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 mr.z World Chat Champion

Joined: 04 Feb 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 20:24 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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I very much agree, there prone to failing for no reason at all and thats a bad bad thing (as clearly illustraited here!)..
Not only that when they do its bend over time since allot of servo/abs brakes can't be fixed at home, which is fuck all use when your in the middle of nowhere with no working brakes (anyone watched the long way arround )
"safety" feature like these really do worry me  ____________________ >RidingSkills<->Tech Tips<->MyBikes< |
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| cagiva gezzer |
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 cagiva gezzer World Chat Champion
Joined: 17 Mar 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 20:30 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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As said, if power assist fails, pull harder.
A (female) friend of mine called me up last week saying that her car brakes no longer work. She was driving along and the pedal went hard and had no braking power.
So, had a poke under the bonnet and found that the vacuum pipe from the pump (diesel) to the servo had split at each end.
New unit fitted and got her to test drive it. As she pulled out of the space she complained that the brake pedal was too soft and the brakes were too powerful. Quick test myself to confirm what they were like and they were normal servo assisted brakes.
Turns out she'd been driving for years with a split hose and hardly any brakes and it took a total loss of assist to make her question it. (and passed MOT's which raped her for new suspension arms, but not faulty brakes)
She's now amazed at how easy it is to brake . . .  ____________________ "because one stroke isnt enough and four strokes waste two" |
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

Joined: 21 Apr 2004 Karma :     
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| finpos |
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 finpos World Chat Champion
Joined: 13 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| Stalk |
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 Stalk Brolly Dolly

Joined: 26 Dec 2005 Karma :   
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| Finglonga |
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 Finglonga World Chat Champion

Joined: 27 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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 Posted: 20:54 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Got ABS on my bike and I always turn it off in dry conditions as I can out brake it...In the wt it is handy though.
As for servo brakes the new 1200GS's are being made without servo's as there have been that many complaints about them failing. Have ridden one that has failed I can understand how people could panic but the brakes do still work (as said above). You just need to squeeze that bit harder.
I must be getting old, I remember and have owned cars without servo's.  ____________________ Andy Sez....
F.Y.Y.F.F. |
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

Joined: 21 Apr 2004 Karma :     
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| Danny |
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 Danny Ask Me About Stoppie School

Joined: 26 Jan 2003 Karma :   
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| Stalk |
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 Stalk Brolly Dolly

Joined: 26 Dec 2005 Karma :   
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| MarJay |
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 MarJay But it's British!

Joined: 15 Sep 2003 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:17 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| sickpup wrote: |
But the hydraulics still work.
No cookie.
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Despite that, on a car you can easily brake at a helluva lot more effort than you normally put in, because you have your whole leg pushing on it and its braced against the seat. I was thinking about this today and I just really move my foot very gently to slow down in my car, even when braking hard. Plus, it doesn't matter if I suddenly become unsure how much braking effort I need to lock my brakes, because if I do accidentally lock them, then I just slide or skid, and I can remove my foot and rebrake. Plus my car has ABS.
On a bike I doubt my hand is calibrated to suddenly add 75% more effort in braking when it is used to using a deft touch on the lever.
And I'd be scared to brake as hard as I could in case I lost the front end. Particularly if I was approaching a roundabout.
Additionally, if I accidentally braked too hard, a car might hit me up the chuff. Which wouldn't be nice.
Whatever anyone says, and whether or not the brakes still work, a sudden large change in braking feel or efficiency is a dangerous thing and I wouldn't want to ride a bike that might do it. ____________________ British beauty: Triumph Street Triple R; Loony stroker: KR1S; Track fun: GSXR750 L1; Commuter Missile: GSX-S1000F
Remember kids, bikes aren't like lego. You can't easily take a part from one bike and then fit it to another. |
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

Joined: 21 Apr 2004 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:24 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| Stalk wrote: |
But the servoless brakes require more force than the driver can produce. End result vehicle not stopping.
Go on, compromise, Half a cookie?
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Ok half a cookie.
I admit I often forget most people aren't built like me. I've had the servo give way on my truck so I just press harder and that weighs a good couple of tons with drums all round.
| Danny wrote: |
Sickpup, I was pulling as hard as I could on the front brake lever, while I was stamping as hard as possible on the rear brake.
As I mentioned earlier, when the servo is not functioning you get roughly 25% of your normal braking force.
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I think you misunderstand what you were told. Yes you may only get 25% of the power you normally get but this isn't 25% of the available breaking power without the servo. In fact unless there isn't a through rod you can exert the same breaking force you just have to put in more force.
| MarJay wrote: |
Despite that, on a car you can easily brake at a helluva lot more effort than you normally put in, because you have your whole leg pushing on it and its braced against the seat. I was thinking about this today and I just really move my foot very gently to slow down in my car, even when braking hard. Plus, it doesn't matter if I suddenly become unsure how much braking effort I need to lock my brakes, because if I do accidentally lock them, then I just slide or skid, and I can remove my foot and rebrake. Plus my car has ABS.
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And if the servo and ABS failed together?
| MarJay wrote: |
On a bike I doubt my hand is calibrated to suddenly add 75% more effort in braking when it is used to using a deft touch on the lever.
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Then if you ever get servo assisted brakes on a bike get the servo serviced every few years or learn that things fail and be prepared.
| MarJay wrote: |
And I'd be scared to brake as hard as I could in case I lost the front end. Particularly if I was approaching a roundabout.
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You'd prefer to drive into traffic?
| MarJay wrote: |
Additionally, if I accidentally braked too hard, a car might hit me up the chuff. Which wouldn't be nice.
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Nicer than driving out into a roundabout full of moving cars
| MarJay wrote: |
Whatever anyone says, and whether or not the brakes still work, a sudden large change in braking feel or efficiency is a dangerous thing and I wouldn't want to ride a bike that might do it.
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And yet you drive a car with a servo and ABS.
Last edited by sickpup on 21:42 - 10 Jan 2007; edited 1 time in total |
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| Danny |
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 Danny Ask Me About Stoppie School

Joined: 26 Jan 2003 Karma :   
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

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| stinkwheel |
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 stinkwheel Bovine Proctologist

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :    
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

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| MarJay |
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 MarJay But it's British!

Joined: 15 Sep 2003 Karma :     
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 Posted: 22:19 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| sickpup wrote: |
And if the servo and ABS failed together?
| As said I can lock the brakes in the car and still stay upright. In fact I have done so in other cars.
| sickpup wrote: |
Then if you ever get servo assisted brakes on a bike get the servo serviced every few years or learn that things fail and be prepared.
| I've had more than one bike whose engine has cut out on me leaving me to coast along.
| sickpup wrote: |
You'd prefer to drive into traffic?
| No, but I'd rather stop than enter a roundabout at an incorrect speed, which I would if the feel of the bikes brakes suddenly failed.
| sickpup wrote: |
Nicer than driving out into a roundabout full of moving cars
| perhaps so.
| sickpup wrote: |
And yet you drive a car with a servo and ABS. |
As stated above, I can lock the wheels at will in a non abs car, and still not crash. even on corners. Plus I can stamp on the pedal, which I can't do on a bike!
I have locked the wheels of a few of my bikes, but never in a corner. Don't think I'd want to try. I'd also rather enter a roundabout poorly in a car with side impact bars than I would on a bike...
My point is that cars and bikes aren't the same. ____________________ British beauty: Triumph Street Triple R; Loony stroker: KR1S; Track fun: GSXR750 L1; Commuter Missile: GSX-S1000F
Remember kids, bikes aren't like lego. You can't easily take a part from one bike and then fit it to another. |
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| Danny |
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 Danny Ask Me About Stoppie School

Joined: 26 Jan 2003 Karma :   
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| plugger147 |
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 plugger147 World Chat Champion

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| Danny |
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 Danny Ask Me About Stoppie School

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| sickpup |
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 sickpup Old Timer

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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 18 years, 355 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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