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16 Jan 2008
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The weight issue is funny. As always people think that the traditional BMW-stuff is heavy. I compared the weight of swingarm, beveldrive/sprocket, driveshaft/chain on a R80GS and a F650GS Paris Dakar:
R80GS shaft 12,4kg
F650GS 9kg
That’s not to bad is it? …… Well if you need to carry a spare set of sprockets and chain the weight for the chain-bike will be 12.3 kg! Still 100 gram lighter but you need lubricants, a few chainlocks and maybe some tools.
Conclusion: Shaftdrive is not necessarily heavier then chain and sprockets!
Sidenote:
Small things like chain guard, chain followers and so on are not included in the weight stated above.
So:
Weight – The same
Cost – Shaft is less expensive in the long run
Maintenance – OldBmw has some good points here, personally I would prefer a few hours job every 100-150.000 km then the hassle with a chain.
Who cares?
Last edited by AliBaba; 16 Jan 2008 at 08:51.
Reason: Added pic
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16 Jan 2008
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Since 1977,all of my bikes have been shaft-drive,CX500,6 Goldwings,5 BMWs.
I've done "serious" miles on all of 'em.For instance,my latest bike,bought new on August 1st '07, has done just under 11,000 miles!
I have never had a single problem with any shaft-drive.
Chains belong on bicycles!!
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16 Jan 2008
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I have to agree with AliBaba, the weight difference isn't big, there is a small weight advantage for chain drive, but not as big as many people think it is.
The main con for shaft is the power loss, which is approximately 18%, chains drives have approximately 11% power loss from the crank. So this clearly dictates shaft drive isn't the best solution for very high performance road racing bikes. But for our consumer use adventure and adventure touring bikes, where 7% power difference wouldn't be noticed, I think we can argue about the cons and pros of each system.
Personally I prefer the shaft-drive. On BMW paralever, you can repair it on the road too, if you know how to do it. You need to carry a main bearing and/or a main seal just in case. They cost less than a good chain set, weight less and take less room carrying them with you.
Quote:
Originally Posted by AliBaba
Who cares?
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Very nice armored assault vehicle , imagine if it was a chain drive and you had to ride home that is 200kms away w/o cleaning and lubricating it, like I often do with my GS - how much chain wear it'll cause? Also if mostly riding on dirt and gravel roads? Even the "sealed" X- or O-ringed chains will give up faster in dirty conditions. Closed systems (both shaft and some enclosed chain drives some older bikes have) are the best there I think in terms of longevity and wear. If riding only on clean tarmac on Western-European and N-American clean main roads then high quality (D.I.D., Regina few other) chains last relatively long (up to 30Kkms, some even more if you aren't a very hard handed rider and clean/lubricate it after every 500km, or after every day when riding in rainy days), but it's a hassle in any case. Your rear wheel will be oily with dirt glued on and your girlfriend (maybe you too if you're too nasty on oiling the chain) will have oily boots, whether you have Scottoiler or you prefer to clean/oil it yourself and you have to keep an eye on it constantly anyway: overall condition, wear of the chain and sprockets, and constantly check&adjust chain slack... In comparision, any 20,000km or more manitenance intervalled (only oil change needed) shaft drive looks very convenient, since you even don't have to touch or look at it in between the maintenance intervals.
In the end of the day each system has it's advantage and disadvantages. Everyone has their own personal requirements, comfort-levels, technical skills and risk assessment in their minds to choose the one that suits the best, IMHO anyways.
Here's mine:
Mine's now at 73Kkm and not a single problem.
Last edited by Margus; 16 Jan 2008 at 14:07.
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16 Jan 2008
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Honda did make a V twin with a shaft drive. The St110, and the Deauville as well as the CX500. But depending on what type of travelling you want to do depends on what bike you choose.
As you said most off roaders dont have shaft drive (apart from a few) for weight as most people say and to keep the bike slimmer and other reasons.
As for choosing a bike give us a possible price you would want to spend on (if you dont mind) the bike and we might be able to give you a few bikes we would think about. and what type of terrain you want to go on, road, bit of off roading, hardcore stuff
I plan to go to morroco and i just bought a Yamaha Xt660r for me i find it a great bike, cheap to run, comfy etc but it has a chain when my old bike a deauville had a shaft drive. But there are plenty of things out there to help stop you throwing money at them like scott oilers, degreasers to clean road crap from the chain etc etc
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17 Jan 2008
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Seem to have spawned quite a discussion here on chains and shafts! After reading through all the posts the only thing one can conclude, as with all these sort of discussions, there are pro's and con's for both systems!
Biking wise I have no experience with long touring outside of europe, but i imagine that if you decide to drive over from up here to SA, it would be fun to get into less familiar type of biking. Probably not the hard core stuff, but some semi offroading, a bit of desert etc seem like a pretty cool experience! So that would probably mean a tenere/africa twin/kle etc enduro style bike. The near daily chain maintenance still scares me off a bit, but if that is what it takes and it can be done without too much problems, it seems like a minor price to pay for a wicked experience!
cheers for al the input
Paul
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17 Jan 2008
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[QUOTE=Margus;168730]
The main con for shaft is the power loss, which is approximately 18%, chains drives have approximately 11% power loss from the crank. So this clearly dictates shaft drive isn't the best solution for very high performance road racing bikes. But for our consumer use adventure and adventure touring bikes, where 7% power difference wouldn't be noticed, I think we can argue about the cons and pros of each system.
end quote
This is not a fixed thing Margus. On the diesel bike forum where bikes often run with a max of 9hp, transmission loss can be substantial. For instance the old Enfield gearbox when filled with grease as recommended consumes over 25% of the crankshaft power. Switching to 90 grade oil halves this, with a further decrease of power absorbtion when using 50 grade oil. The new (since 1995 or so) 5 speed gearbox on 50 grade oil will often allow a bike to go an extra 10mph, as it absorbs very little power.
Many modern bikes run the gears in the very thin synthetic engine oils which reduce drag to a minimum, wheras the bmw's use separate gear oil of 75/80 weight. Worse for BMW's is that the gearbox is directly coupled to the engine, so there is no primary reduction. This means the input shaft turns 2-3 times faster. to compound this problem, the output shaft is offset to drive the shaft. This forced BMW to use a gearbox that not only spins fast but final drive is via transverse cogs, all of which conspire to drain power. Old Gearboxes and most car gearboxes usually lock the input to the output on the same shaft, so in top gear power is not trasferred by energy wasting gears at all. This normally can easily be checked by looking to see if top gear is shown as a 1:1 ratio. Final drive ratio should always use the least amount of intermediaries for highest efficiency ( and probably component life).
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17 Jan 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by oldbmw
This is not a fixed thing Margus. On the diesel bike forum where bikes often run with a max of 9hp, transmission loss can be substantial. For instance the old Enfield gearbox when filled with grease as recommended consumes over 25% of the crankshaft power. Switching to 90 grade oil halves this, with a further decrease of power absorbtion when using 50 grade oil. The new (since 1995 or so) 5 speed gearbox on 50 grade oil will often allow a bike to go an extra 10mph, as it absorbs very little power.
Many modern bikes run the gears in the very thin synthetic engine oils which reduce drag to a minimum, wheras the bmw's use separate gear oil of 75/80 weight. Worse for BMW's is that the gearbox is directly coupled to the engine, so there is no primary reduction. This means the input shaft turns 2-3 times faster. to compound this problem, the output shaft is offset to drive the shaft. This forced BMW to use a gearbox that not only spins fast but final drive is via transverse cogs, all of which conspire to drain power. Old Gearboxes and most car gearboxes usually lock the input to the output on the same shaft, so in top gear power is not trasferred by energy wasting gears at all. This normally can easily be checked by looking to see if top gear is shown as a 1:1 ratio. Final drive ratio should always use the least amount of intermediaries for highest efficiency ( and probably component life).
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Hmmm...
I did dynoed my GS and guys who've dynoed most of the bikes and have extensive experiences on this field said the BMW-spec gearbox/paralever drive-train is within the power loss spec of most of other modern shaft-drived systems (or my over 60Kkms done GS performed well above factory performance specs to "cheat" the dyno machine results calculation), including japanese bikes with wet clutches and gearboxes floating in the crankcases in a very thin engine oil. I use spec oils only: usually 75W-90 GL5 both in gear- and bevel box.
The pro for BMW engine+gearbox system is all the shafts rotate parallel, which, at least in theory, should give the best mechanical efficiency and longevity - i.e. lot of unusually high mileage BMWs, Honda STs & Goldwings, some Guzzis. Engines where 90-degree turns are done have their own "uneffective" losses. So maybe that's why on dyno the BMW specs the same as other shaft-drived bikes that have all the friction going on in the thin engine oil, but with 90 degree turn at one point before it's transferred into shaft(?) I.e. bikes like Yamaha Diversion, Suzuki GS or VX, Honda XLV etc.
I agree the power loss ratio does vary, that's why I use the word "approximately" anyways. Depends on the temperatures of oils, mechanical details (i.e. Klingelnberg-Polloid spiral pattern in BMW paralevers), ratios, oil viscosity etc. But with modern shaft drived bikes the power loss is around 18% range running in common transmission oils in bevel boxes. I'm sure Enfields etc with different oils (even full of grease variant as you said) have different results and probably have more power loss than the modern siblings.
Last edited by Margus; 17 Jan 2008 at 09:18.
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17 Jan 2008
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If you feel that the BMW is lazy because of all the powerloss in the driveline (which I personally don’t think is bad compared to an old beaten up chain) there are plenty of modifications that can be done to increase the power.
Somewhere in the North western corner of Tanzania my pannier more or less fell of when I landed after an unplanned jump. Wonder if chain and sprocket would have made it?
BTW. I also have a bike with chain :-)
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17 Jan 2008
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errr Yes!
Quote:
Originally Posted by AliBaba
Somewhere in the North western corner of Tanzania my pannier more or less fell of when I landed after an unplanned jump. Wonder if chain and sprocket would have made it?
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Wonder why they don't use SHAFT drive on Moto-cross bikes???
They jump a fair way!
Martyn
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17 Jan 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Martynbiker
Wonder why they don't use SHAFT drive on Moto-cross bikes???
They jump a fair way!
Martyn
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I guess they don’t have problems with panniers falling off?
MX is a bit different. They spend a few hours with service after they have ridden a few kilometers, but if that suits your travel-style it might be the right choice.
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18 Jan 2008
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How much do they weigh??
Quote:
Originally Posted by AliBaba
The weight issue is funny. As always people think that the traditional BMW-stuff is heavy. I compared the weight of swingarm, beveldrive/sprocket, driveshaft/chain on a R80GS and a F650GS Paris Dakar:
R80GS shaft 12,4kg
F650GS 9kg
That’s not to bad is it? …… Well if you need to carry a spare set of sprockets and chain the weight for the chain-bike will be 12.3 kg! Still 100 gram lighter but you need lubricants, a few chainlocks and maybe some tools.
Conclusion: Shaftdrive is not necessarily heavier then chain and sprockets!
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Hi Alibaba,
I just cannot imagine what it is about a couple of sprockets and a chain that adds up to 9 Kg.
Can't say I have ever weighed suchlike though.
I would "imagine", again I don't have weighing scales to hand, that the current crop of BMW shafties are heavier than the earlier models - they just look bigger and, therefore, heavier.
So, is it a useful comparison to take an old bike alongside a current production model (including the next generation of F650GS)?. I quite understand that you are riding one, so you have a personal interest!
I do like the way that BMW are prepared to manufacture bikes with all 3 common(ish) drive systems; shaft, chain and belt. In the next few years, we may see more of the chain drive models appearing, or belts for that matter.
Apart from this, I would just like to remind the original questioner that the chain drive bike can have it's gear ratios changed pretty easily - I don't hear or read of shaft drive owners fiddling with their gear ratios.
That's why the "racers" will always have a whole pile of sprockets and gearboxes for the various circuits - lets see how BMW are going to deal with this when they go racing!!
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18 Jan 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Walkabout
Hi Alibaba,
I just cannot imagine what it is about a couple of sprockets and a chain that adds up to 9 Kg.
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That's because the swingarm are included (for both shaft and chain). The swingarm are very different on shaft vs chain bikes.
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18 Jan 2008
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Ah!
Maybe difficult to separate out the functions for a shafty, but I may look around for a single-sided swing arm/chain drive and weigh it!
A Duc or a Triumph perhaps??!
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18 Jan 2008
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Just thought of an even more different angle to look at this from, style/looks. I have never has someone say on look at that swing arm of a shalf bike, but you hear it all the time with sometime like a chain drive as they are more flexable and cheaper to produce using less materails to make them.
And there is a bike out there is there not with a seperate swing arm to shaft drive. The yamaha Dragster 800 and the suzuki marauder both have an outter frame for swing arma and a separate shaft drive unit. Looks weird but is more like a 1 off look.
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18 Jan 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maxwell123455
Just thought of an even more different angle to look at this from, style/looks. I have never has someone say on look at that swing arm of a shalf bike, but you hear it all the time with sometime like a chain drive as they are more flexable and cheaper to produce using less materails to make them.
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True, although I don't give a vast amount of credence to "styling" - it's important once the engineering is good.
But, there are lots of riders in the showrooms who judge by little else than the looks.
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