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Intercontinental
Ballistic Tourer
All
motorcycles have a natural state of being. A place that is
not only a perfect fit but helps define the purpose of that
motorcycle. Sport bikes belong on twisty sections of
two-lane roads, a cruiser is truly at home on the wide-open
prairie, a dual-sport won't hit its stride until the
pavement ends. For the K1200LT its natural state is moving
you from one end of this country to the other with a minimum
of effort. BMW's luxury touring bike has reinvented the
class and is gathering a strong and loyal
following.
BMW,
like most manufacturers, throws a long set of numbers and
letters at you to describe their bikes. So here is a little
primer as to what they mean on current bikes. First, there
is the one of three letters that starts out any model
designation. They are R, K, or F. This letter denotes the
engine type, R is for the flat two cylinder opposed
air-cooled bikes a.k.a. boxers or oil-heads. K is for the
water-cooled flat four (and older three) cylinder motors
known as "flying bricks". The last and newest motor style is
the F, a vertical single cylinder which has no nickname I
know of yet. Next comes a set of numbers, which is simply
denoting the engine size in cubic centimeters. The last set
of letters is an indication of what type of bike it is, i.e.
the C in R1200C stands for cruiser, GS is German translation
of land/street, or RT is rally/tourer.
This brings us to
this month's test ride the K1200LT. As you can see from its
model designation hidden beneath all that bodywork lies the
newest version of BMW's venerable K motor. Developed in the
early eighties, the K motor has seen continued to be one of
the main stays in the BMW line. Enlarged to 1173cc and
reworked to produce 100 horsepower at the crank, this newest
version of the K is a wonderful motor that balances power
with fuel economy while being ultra smooth. The K12 motor
has 4 valves per cylinder and dual overhead cams. Then
combine fuel injection, a catalytic converter and Bosch
Mototronic engine management and you have a powerplant that
runs clean, smooth and strong. Like to run a lot of gadgets
or want the absolute biggest driving lights money can
afford? The LT come with a 60 amp alternator that puts out
840 watts. For those fuzzy on what number like that mean, my
first car had only a 30-amp alternator and many modern cars
use 60-amp alternators. The gearbox is a 5-speed unit and
the clutch is a very European single-plate dry-clutch and
hydraulically actuated. The final drive is a shaft the runs
through BMW's patented Paralever rear suspension. The
Paralever is a single sided swingarm that has been designed
to eliminate the jacking effect of shaft drives. I'm not
really clear how the geometry works but I can say this, it
works. The rear of the bike stays steady regardless of what
I do with the throttle.
The chassis for
the LT is a large cast aluminum piece with the motor hanging
below it as a stressed member of the frame. Interestingly
the LT shares it frame with its sport touring brother the
K1200RS. The fact that the LT shares so much with the RS
reveals how sporty the engineers really wanted the LT to be.
The front suspension is the BMW Telelever which does not use
conventional forks. Instead the fork tubes are given only
one job, hold the front wheel. A V shaped swingarm that runs
from a brace hidden by the front fender back to the frame
and is held up by a conventional mono-shock handles the
suspension duties. It may sound a bit complicated but in
practice it works like as charm. Under heavy braking the
front end does not dive at all. The front wheel tracks well
over pavement ripples and the shock soaks up all but the
sharpest bumps. The lack of front-end dive has added
benefits as well. While braking hard the suspension
continues to soak up and bumps you encounter keeping the
front wheel planted. Also the front end doesn't get that
heavy steering feel during braking giving you greater
control especially during emergency maneuvers.
The brakes are a
pair of 12 inch rotors pinched by 4 piston Brembo calipers
up front and a single disc in back. The brakes are strong
and linear but their greatest asset lies in the fact that
they are controlled by BMW's second generation ABS. This
feature should be standard on all motorcycles not just the
high end machines. The confidence the Anti-Lock gives when
stopping in all conditions is wonderful. In an emergency you
simply hit the brakes as hard as you can, no need to think
about over braking and losing control. The ABS works
seamlessly, I have been unable to get anything more than a
chirp out of the tires while slamming on the brakes and it
has never been intrusive. You really forget it's there until
needed.
The K12 comes with
an impressive list of standard features and a nice list of
options. On the base model you get the electronically
adjustable windshield that can be moved on the fly, it
sounds silly but the idea is being copied by other brands. A
nice set of fully integrated luggage that with proper
packing can hold enough gear for most any trip. A single key
operates the ignition and locks on all the bags. The ABS
brakes are standard as well as updated switch controls and
adjustable levers and a two-position driver seat. Power
accessory sockets for any added electronics or for charging
the battery. A full set of gauges including fuel and coolant
temperature gauges, a digital clock and assorted warning
lights. My favorites are the heated grips and electronic
cruise control. A very nice sound system using 8 speakers in
four locations is standard as well. The radio is an AM/FM
and has a Weather-band feature that can be a lifesaver. A
cassette player is also included but the optional 6-disc CD
player would get more use.
The
next step up from the base model is the Custom, which gives
you the following options. Chrome highlights scattered
around the bike. The aforementioned CD player and heated
seats (no bun warmer jokes please), an alarm, a third brake
light and luggage rack mounted on the top case. It also gets
the very useful driving computer that features gives you air
temp, fuel economy, fuel range till empty and average speed.
All are very useful especially for you rally types or those
of you who just like be continually fooling with a
gadget.
The top of the
line and price heap is the Elite model, which includes all
the goodies previously mentioned, and also adds the
integrated communication system and CB radio. The com system
is a very nice feature, which allow rider to passenger
communication as well as the ability to hook a cell phone or
two-way radio radar detector into the com system. The CB is
also a great tool on the road and is often the standard form
of bike to bike communication. The Elite also adds BMW's
newest feature a GPS receiver made for BMW by Garmin. For
those who have never used a GPS, it is a very useful tool
that make navigating on the fly easy and makes getting truly
lost next to impossible. For those acquainted with GPS I
need not say anymore.
Enough about all
the bells and whistles. How does the K stack up against the
other players in the touring market. The K12 was aimed
straight at the Goldwing 1500 and has done a fantastic job
of raising the bar. Enough so that Honda hurried the 1800
Wing to market. The power of the 1800 may be greater than
the K12 but you pay for that in decreased fuel economy and
marginal range. And when the interstate ends and the
twisties begin you'll want on the LT. The combination of
great suspension, brakes and cornering clearance makes the
LT the winner on anything other than a straight line. We
recently had the chance to run the LT around a real race
track and found that despite it huge size and weight it was
fun bike to throw around a track and blasting out banjo
music through the stereo keeps the corner workers and
competition guessing. The LT is rather top heavy and while
this makes it unwieldy at time in parking lots once you open
the throttle the weight just disappears.
On the open road
the LT gobbles up miles like me at a Chinese buffet. 1000
mile days are very easily knocked down. This all thanks to a
very comfortable neutral riding position. Even after back to
back 1000+ mile days I was always looking forward to getting
back on the bike. The is the first machine I've ridden where
I wished for even greater fuel range because I just didn't
want to get off. Therein lays the LT greatest charm, you
just want to keep riding. All the goodies and options that
seem unnecessary become very appreciated and eliminate many
of the distractions that take away from your ride.
The best
compliment I can pay the LT is that it makes me want to ride
more. Any bike that does that is number one in my book. If
you are in the market for a touring bike the K1200LT
certainly deserves your consideration.
by Sev Pearman
What makes 100
horsepower, weighs 834 pounds and hauls better than it has a
right to? What pampers you with an electrically adjustable
windshield, yet corners harder and deeper than many
sport-touring platforms? The correct answer is BMW's
flagship K1200LT
BMW is a small
player in the US, steadily holding 3 to 4 per cent of the
motorcycle market. While they are found everywhere, they
aren't seen every day, unless you work for Senior Editor
Wanchena. For those who aren't familiar with their products,
the K refers to the inline 4-cylinder, 4-valve/cylinder
motor family; the 1200 alludes to the new, larger (duh)
displacement, and the LT stands for "Luxury
Touring."
The
LT evolves from the 4-valve K-bike family. Initially offered
in standard, sport and sport-touring varieties, they have
proven to be solid machines. Riders demanded a touring
platform to equal that of the mighty Goldwing, and no doubt
BMW craved a slice of the lucrative touring bike pie. The
result? The awkward and frumpy K1100LT.
Even though the
touring K1100LT was introduced just before the sport-touring
K1100RS in 1993, both bikes were developed on the same
platform. The factory took their excellent sport-touring
K1100RS platform and saddled it with touring amenities.
While a good bike on its own, it didn't have the refinement
of the then-new 1500-6 Goldwing. Wing riders weren't swayed
by the BMW's performance, and BMW riders didn't appreciate
the added weight and expense of the touring equipment. In
addition, the stereo sucked. Sales of the K11LT were
lukewarm.
Back to the
drawing board and BMW set out to make the best touring bike,
period. The K1200LT is that bike. Released in 1999, the LT
has rocked the motorcycle world. American riders have
cautiously accepted the new uber-tourer. The LT has the
touring amenities to keep Mr. and Ms. Americade happy, and
still delivers riding performance to please the BMW
faithful.
How does she stack
up to the 1500-6 Wing, BMW's obvious target? The LT comes
ready-to-tour with the following goodies: reverse-assist to
aid parking; an 840(!) Watt alternator with enough juice to
power his and her electric clothing, auxiliary lights, the
CD changer and a coffee maker; and a seat that adjusts to
either 31.5" or a bootscraping 30.3"
You cannot miss
the electrically adjustable windshield that accommodates
most any rider. Raise it on the fly for high-speed comfort,
and lower it when entering towns for airflow and visibility.
Operation is via an intuitive left thumbswitch. Simple and
efficient. BMW has always made excellent, well-integrated
bikes, and this feature does them proud.
BMW heated
handgrips come standard, along with a power socket that can
be used to both power accessories and charge the battery
while garaged. Best of all is the real time cruise control,
operated by a left thumb control. Once speed is set, the
engine brain compensates for hills and load. Like BMW
sedans, simply bump the switch forward to increase speed by
one mile per hour, tap it toward you to tweak it back down.
This feature works, and is flawless.
Of course, all
locks are keyed to match the ignition. One key does it all
here. Both clutch and front brake levers are adjustable. The
LT has one-button 4-way hazards, and MMM asks again, "Why
don't all motorcycles come with this cheap and practical
feature?" A 6+ gallon tank coupled with 43-odd mpg gives a
respectable 250+ mile range, including reserve.
All LTs come with
an AM/FM cassette stereo. It is controlled, like all of the
features on this bike, by glove-sized weatherproof buttons.
A second set is provided for the passenger. Nothing keeps
the peace on a tour like giving the passenger DJ duties. The
audio can be further upgraded by adding the 6 CD changer
(lives in the right saddlebag) and/or a factory CB radio
(hides under tank cover.)
Best of all, it
stomps the 1500-6 Goldwing in performance. BMWs new LT had
faster acceleration and a higher top speed. You got an extra
100 miles of fuel range and a whopping 488-pound carrying
capacity, all features that touring riders had been
screaming for.
The K1200LT was an
immediate hit. The American moto press praised it highly,
earning laurels from touring-based Rider magazine and "Best
Touring Bike" from Motorcycle Consumer News. Hell, our
Senior Editor sold off the old horse and promptly bought
one. American Honda was stunned, and pushed an early release
of the rumored 1800-6 Goldwing. When a small manufacturer
forces the largest player in the US market to react to a
product, you know they have a success.
OK,
the touring set likes it, but what is it like to ride? BMW
didn't leave performance out of the recipe. The K12 comes
with an aluminum frame, triple disc brakes with 2nd
generation Anti-Lock (ABS II), 4.5" of ground clearance and
Z-rated rubber. The motor puts out 100 horsepower and is
both injected and made pure through dual catalytic
converters.
This new motor
rocks. It is torque heavy, so all you need do in any gear is
roll on the throttle. Add a downshift, and the thrust will
surprise you. The 1200 LT hides its honest 834 wet pounds
well. It is almost flickable. Steering is light and
predictable and it is easy to 'slalom' between highway
dashed lines at 65 mph (closed course, professional rider,
kids; don't try this at home, blah blah blah) One oddity is
the tiller-like handlebars. I felt as if I were riding an
antique flat-tanker. I'm not sure if they are a styling
decision or a leverage call, but an owner would soon grow
accustomed to their feel.
There are
ridiculous amounts of cornering clearance. I was never able
to find bottom even with my 240 pounds and the installed
footpeg-lowering option. This bike has the capability to
take corners that would have "more qualified" sport-tourers
dropping the anchors. Take that turn too slowly? No matter.
Simply activate the 100-horse thrusters, Mr. Sulu
The styling, while
unified, is somewhat alien. It certainly is unmistakable.
Some riders liked that the integrated luggage "didn't look
tacked on," and that the fairing provided "decent coverage."
Others felt it all looked "swoopy" or
"plastic-ky"
The fairing is
simply excellent. Engineers have created a generous air
bubble with extensive computer modeling and/or wind tunnel
testing. By tracing my hand around the edge of the fairing
as I rode, I was able to find an additional fistful of quiet
air around the edge.
The dash is
complete and legible. The large analog speedo and tach are
complemented by accurate fuel and coolant temp gauges. Also
included are a digital clock and the 'BC' window. With this
feature (Bavarian Computer?) you can cycle through air temp,
remaining range, average speed and fuel mileage
functions.
Two tankfulls was
hardly enough to explore both the touring capability and
performance envelope of this remarkable machine. It is
arguably the finest touring platform available today, as
well as a surprisingly capable sport-tourer. If you are in
the market to replace your ST1100, Concours or BMW RS/RT,
test ride this motorcycle. If you are looking at an FLH
Ultra or the new 1800-6 Wing, check out the K1200 LT. You
may come away with a different motorcycle
Encores:
- Hides weight
well
- 24-hour riding
comfort
- Civilized
refinement, sir
Boos:
- Goofy bars are
an acquired taste
- Greater range
please
- das
Stijling
Wife's First
Reaction:
- "Wow. It's a
big, SPACE-ship bike
"
Selected
Competition:
- BMW R1150
RT
- Harley
Davidson FLH Ultra and Road Glide
- Honda Goldwing
and Valkyrie Interstate
- Kawasaki
Concours
- Triumph Trophy
1200
- Yamaha Venture
SPECIFICATIONS:
BMW K1200LT
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MSRP
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$16,990
(Standard)
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$19,800
(Custom)
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$22,500
(Elite)
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Warranty
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3 years,
miles 36,000
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Engine
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liq.-cooled
4-stroke in-line 4-cylinder
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Bore x
Stroke
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70.5mm x
75mm
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Displacement
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1171cc
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Compression
ratio
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10.8:1
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Claimed
power
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100 hp @
6,750 rpm
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Claimed
torque
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85 lb.-ft
@ 4750 rpm
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Fuel
System
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fuel
injection w/ Bosch Mototronic engine
management
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Valves
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4
valves/cylinder
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Service
intervals
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12,000
miles
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Final
Drive
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Shaft
drive
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Charging
system
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14V 60
Amp Alternator 840 watts
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Wheelbase
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64.3
in/1633mm
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Rake
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26.8
degrees
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Front
suspension
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Telelever,
with leading link pivoted centrally on main frame w
/ gas filled shock
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Front
brakes
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Twin 12
inch rotors; 4-piston Brembo calipers w/ BMW ABS
II
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Front
tire
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120/70 -
17 Metzler 880 Marathon
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Front
wheel
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3.5 x 17
cast light alloy
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Rear
suspension
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Patented
BMW Paralever swingarm & shaft drive w / gas
filled shock
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Rear
brake
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11.2 inch
rotor 4-piston Brembo caliper w/ BMW ABS
II
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Rear
tire
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160/70 -
17 Metzler 880 Marathon
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Rear
wheel
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5.0 x 17
cast light alloy
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Weight:
(wet)
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834 lbs
(claimed)
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Fuel
capacity
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6.2
gallons, inc. 1 gallon reserve
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Seat
height
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30.3 /
31.5 inches
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M.M.M.
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