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blueglue
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PostPosted: 23:14 - 01 Nov 2015    Post subject: So now is the time to buy new Reply with quote

Well it appears after speaking to a dealer today that being 'off season' and the new ABS law coming in you can basically walk away with a non abs bike cheap as chips from November.

Most of the manufacturers are trying to dump their non abs stock, but in fairness most dealerships are only holding a few these days.

Definitely worth a punt if you are holding off until the weathers better. save a couple of grand and stick it in the garage.

*source* your mum Mr. Green
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 10:37 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm still confuddled about when mandatory ABS (linked brakes, Euro 4, OBD, nanny chips, A2 anti-tamper) actually arrives in practice. On various readings of the Eurodiktats it could be 2016, 2017, or just that Brussels won't homologate new designs as of next year.

Given the amount of new-old-stock kicking around, I wonder whether importers / dealers will have to register all of their Euro 3 / non-ABS bikes before the actual deadline and there will be a big glut of pre-reg bikes to snap up.

Riding gods who know that they can outbrake ABS under all circumstances shouldn't hang around too long though.
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J.M.
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PostPosted: 10:43 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Always hated the idea of ABS on bikes, until the other day doing an emergency stop on a wet road with a fair amount of fallen leaves. Some girl fell off of her skateboard, that she was riding on the road, and sent the board straight towards me.

Locked the front. Managed to not drop the bike. Didn't stop in time (she must have only been 2 meters in front of me when she fell) but the board and herself luckily missed me).

I do wonder if ABS would have saved me from locking the front.
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UnknownStuntm...
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PostPosted: 10:46 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

J.M. wrote:
I do wonder if ABS would have saved me from locking the front.

Only if it was installed on the skateboard, no?
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 11:27 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

J.M. wrote:
Always hated the idea of ABS on bikes

Rather an extreme position. Although I'm sure folk said much the same about those new fangled over complicated hydraulic brakes replacing good old tried and tested cables and drums.

J.M. wrote:
I do wonder if ABS would have saved me from locking the front.

That's exactly what it's for.

I'm holding out for an ABS Enfield, so do please do buy up all the legacy non-ABS stock.
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KnightsFall
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PostPosted: 14:00 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rogerborg wrote:
I'm still confuddled about when mandatory ABS (linked brakes, Euro 4, OBD, nanny chips, A2 anti-tamper) actually arrives in practice. On various readings of the Eurodiktats it could be 2016, 2017, or just that Brussels won't homologate new designs as of next year.

Given the amount of new-old-stock kicking around, I wonder whether importers / dealers will have to register all of their Euro 3 / non-ABS bikes before the actual deadline and there will be a big glut of pre-reg bikes to snap up.

Riding gods who know that they can outbrake ABS under all circumstances shouldn't hang around too long though.


Not sure but I believe there is a year's grace period for existing models and every new bike will need to conform from 2017 onwards. Presumably then it will be a case of no new designs being homologated that do not conform. However, I notice that Kawasaki seem to have dropped non-ABS models from their 2016 lineup, even for existing models.
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Polarbear
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PostPosted: 14:09 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Is this all bikes? Scooters, mopeds, 125's?

Surely another nail in the coffin of biking.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 14:48 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

KnightsFall wrote:
Not sure but I believe there is a year's grace period for existing models and every new bike will need to conform from 2017 onwards. Presumably then it will be a case of no new designs being homologated that do not conform. However, I notice that Kawasaki seem to have dropped non-ABS models from their 2016 lineup, even for existing models.

As I understood it, it was going to be 2016 for new models and 2017 for old ones, where "new" and "old" was defined by the diktat coming in around 2012 or 2013. So anything homologated after 2013 or so should have ABS from 2016.

But really, who knows? I haven't been able to follow the horse trading, and the motorcycle press hasn't been keeping an eye on it, that's for sure.


Polarbear wrote:
Is this all bikes? Scooters, mopeds, 125's?

My current understanding is that from next year (for various definitions of next and year and new vs old designs or stock):

Arrow All powered two wheelers must meet Euro 4 emissions.
Arrow Bikes over 125cc (i.e. A2, A) must have ABS. It can only be switched off on "dual purpose" on/off road bikes.
Arrow Mopeds and bikes up to 125cc (AM, A1) must have either ABS or "linked brakes".
Arrow A2 bikes (only) must have anti-tamper measures to prevent increasing power.
Arrow All (?) bikes must have some sort of On Board Data socket

That's the headlines. In the details:

The emissions explain the rush to water cooling. There will doubtless be a cull of many models that can't scam their way through. Consider the seven jillion models of carbed Chinese bike that barely made Euro 3, or older engine designs like Suzuki's 650 v-twin.

ABS or linked brakes requires discs front and rear. Again, the big casualties will be mopeds and 125s. Honda has just replaced the CBF125 with the CB125F with a rear drum, so we'll say goodbye to that as well in short order.

I haven't seen recent details of the OBD or anti-tamper. In its initial form, anti-tamper was supposed to apply to all bikes, including a nanny-chip to detect and (in the initial tranche of requirements) report that you'd meddled with it via the OBD. The final scenario was that your bike will go into limp-home mode if it reckons that you've laid a finger anywhere on the power train. That didn't make it into the diktat this time round, but some form of mandatory anti-tamper was still on the cards for A2 bikes last I saw. I'm thinking of the hardened rivets on the Hyosung end can that I had a sod of a time drilling out for a chum.

OBD doesn't appear to be standardised, which means it's there to rat us out as above, not to benefit us. Contrast with cars: you can buy a generic OBD II reader for £7 that will work with any modern car. The equivalent reader for my Nazi Tractor is multiple hundreds of ponds for the cheap "retail" version.

It's a big old bureaucratic mess that will hammer basic, cheap bikes to the benefit of the Bosch. Literally, Bosch bought ginger witch MEP Kerstin Westphal to try and get ABS mandated for 125s as well, but that was too much even for Brussels.

tl;dr version - dunno, I'm not sure anyone does.
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blueglue
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PostPosted: 16:39 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well this is the official document but you can imagine its not bedtime reading material.

https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:32013R0168&from=EN

It does mention 1st January 2016 and there are at least twenty variants of motorcycle included and also some that arent (like motocross/enduro bikes).

Im not certain anything that is out there will be an issue but anything physically produced by the factory beginning next year will need to meet this approval.

Maybe someone can decipher it better
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 16:55 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

That's the fellow.

Mopeds (including 3 and 4 wheelers) appear to get another year's grace because of Reasons.

Dammit, it looks like anti-tamper has made it into A1 (125cc) as well. Only full power (L3e-A3) bikes are exempt. Sad

On OBD, the devil will be in the detail of the 'delegated acts'.

The bit that I'm searching for is a crystal clear statement on whether the dates only apply to new type approvals, or to bikes "made available on the market, registered and entering into service" (i.e. sold).

If it's the former, no big deal. If it's the latter, that gives two months to sell every single old-tech bike in the EU. Surely not.
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GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike
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Undinist
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PostPosted: 17:58 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

TL, DR summary: relying on ABS is dangerous because it makes you go faster.

-------------------------

I disabled the ABS on my '94 BM - it would get confused by uneven surfaces and release the brakes just as I was trying to stop at a junction. I've always had this problem with the BMW ABS2 system. But there aren't any similar tales of woe on the interweb, so either lots of other ABS2 users have been killed by it, or I have a uniquely terrible riding style. It's a shame really, I'm sure ABS would do a better job than me if I had to do an emergency stop at speed, especially in the rain. At least I'm well aware of my limitations...so maybe I'm getting an active safety benefit because I'm paying more attention.
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Irn-Bru
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PostPosted: 20:13 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Saw a video once where a rider was going along and braked heavily, ABS kicked in and sent him wide on the corner and he went off course (no kittens were harmed). But seemed to me the opposite of what ABS is about. Poor rider skill or ABS issue? Also doesn't ABS add 5KG+ of weight and make bleeding brakes very difficult?
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 21:26 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rogerborg wrote:

I'm holding out for an ABS Enfield, so do please do buy up all the legacy non-ABS stock.


An Enfield can lock the wheels?

All the best

Katy
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Northern Monkey
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PostPosted: 22:04 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Kickstart wrote:
Rogerborg wrote:

I'm holding out for an ABS Enfield, so do please do buy up all the legacy non-ABS stock.


An Enfield can lock the wheels?

All the best

Katy



More due to the shit avon tyres than the stopping power of the brakes
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Ariel Badger
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PostPosted: 22:24 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Kickstart wrote:
Rogerborg wrote:

I'm holding out for an ABS Enfield, so do please do buy up all the legacy non-ABS stock.


An Enfield can lock the wheels?

All the best

Katy


I locked the front up on a 1939 Ariel in 2007, broke my ribs and destroyed my hip in the process. Twisted Evil
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redeem ouzzer
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PostPosted: 22:56 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

ABS is more for commuting than serious riding (i.e. going quick).

Discuss.
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barrkel
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PostPosted: 23:14 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

ABS encourages you to go faster in a straight line in dodgy traction because you know you can slow quickly without fuss.

The reason it's good for commuting isn't because it isn't good when you're pushing the limit; it's because you generally commute no matter what the weather, whereas most people's "serious riding" is on sunny weekends. If you're braking hard enough to test available traction in the dry on public roads, IMO you may be pushing a bit too much.

Personally I think it's a little bit hard to resist using it to make up time on a slippery wet autumn day though. Accelerate hard when straight up, brake hard when straight up, smooth everywhere else.

ABS on my scooter adds 2.9kg vs model without.
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blueglue
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PostPosted: 23:21 - 02 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

to be fair you have to be in some shoddy conditions or in way over your head to get ABS to even kick in.
Hell my bike has traction control so im a drone anyway.
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bamt
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PostPosted: 01:01 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rogerborg wrote:

Rather an extreme position. Although I'm sure folk said much the same about those new fangled over complicated hydraulic brakes replacing good old tried and tested cables and drums.


Have to agree. Never had problems bleeding the system, pistons corroding or seals needing replacing on proper cable and drum brakes. Ideally you'd use rods instead of cables too - no fraying issues like you get on those fancy pants systems.
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Polarbear
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PostPosted: 03:22 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Linked brake systems Evil or Very Mad Just why.

I have had Goldwings, a Blackbird and now my Trophy that have had linked brakes and I still haven't worked out why it is better than separate front and rear brake circuits.

The Trophy has some progressive system that alters the ratio of front and back depending on the conditions. Link in the ABS I'm surprised it even expects me to operate the damn things. Mad

Over complicated crap.
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bamt
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PostPosted: 07:30 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's like the new car assisted braking stuff coming out now. You don't even need to take your eyes off facebook whilst driving anymore, the car will automatically stop if you are about to hit something.

Thats fine for moments of inattention, but it ought to be combined with a robotic hand that comes out of the steering, gives the driver a good slap, then retracts, in order to stop people relying upon it.
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arry
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PostPosted: 10:12 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

GT200Fan79 wrote:
ABS is more for commuting than serious riding (i.e. going quick).

Discuss.


Writing a post ending discuss makes you look like a massive spaz.

/FACT
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 10:46 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Digest reply:

Irn-Bru wrote:
doesn't ABS add 5KG+ of weight and make bleeding brakes very difficult?

A couple of KG and no, not necessarily. It used to be a pain on some servo assisted systems, it's fine on my Tractor.

Kickstart wrote:
An Enfield can lock the wheels?

https://www.bikechatforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=4153931#4153931


GT200Fan79 wrote:
ABS is more for commuting than serious riding (i.e. going quick).

Discuss.

Daily commuting in all conditions vs indulging your racebike fantasies on a handful of sunny Sundays - which one is more serious?

Question is rhetorical, but not the way you think.


Polarbear wrote:
Linked brake systems Evil or Very Mad Just why.

They make sense on scooters where the rear actually matters. The linked brakes on my Burgman were excellent.


So, anyone been into a dealer yet? Wink
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GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike
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Enduro Numpty
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PostPosted: 11:44 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

ABS adds 10KG to the weight of my Fireblade but if I could be arsed I could easily shed 10KG from my BMI and balance it out. All FJR1300's have it as standard these days but they're comparable to a cruise ship in terms of weight anyway so no big deal.

On balance I think ABS is a good thing though I think compulsion is just bullshit and the fact that Bosch stand to make lots of money makes it a commercial thing rather than addressing concerns over safety.

What I'm not sure about is linked braking. Pull the brake lever on the FJR and only 6 of the 8 front pistons operate - the other 2 are activated by the brake pedal at the same time as the rear brake. When lever and pedal are operated together the brakes are superb but there are times when I want only the rear brake. Also when I pull hard on the (front) lever I would much prefer to have 100% front brake.

Fireblade combined ABS operates slightly differently. Brakes aren't linked as such till the system senses lock-up on one of the wheels. It then electronically activates the brake on the other wheel. I much prefer this system though there are a lot of reports of it being less than reliable. I've never had a problem and Honda not surprisingly don't acknowledge there is an issue. Bleeding this particular ABS system is a seriously complicated procedure and will involve 4 or 5 hours at a Honda dealers if owners can't do it themselves!!
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winz
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PostPosted: 11:51 - 03 Nov 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Polarbear wrote:
Linked brake systems Evil or Very Mad Just why.

I have had Goldwings, a Blackbird and now my Trophy that have had linked brakes and I still haven't worked out why it is better than separate front and rear brake circuits.

The Trophy has some progressive system that alters the ratio of front and back depending on the conditions. Link in the ABS I'm surprised it even expects me to operate the damn things. Mad

Over complicated crap.


Over complicated, yes, but on the blackbird don't you like the way that when you brake you don't nosedive and feel like you're one a magic carpet?
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