BMW R  80GS Paris Dakar

     

 

Make Model

BMW R 80GS Paris Dakar

Year

1984

Engine

Air cooled, four stroke, two cylinder horizontally opposed Boxer, pushrod operated 2 valves per cylinder.

Capacity

797.5
Bore x Stroke 84.8 x 70.6 mm
Compression Ratio 8.2:1

Induction

2x Bing carbs

Ignition  /  Starting

Bosch electronic  /  kick & electric

Max Power

50 hp 37 KW @ 6500 rpm

Max Torque

56.7 Nm  41 ft lb @ 5000 rpm

Transmission  /  Drive

5 Speed  /  shaft

Front Suspension

Telescopic hydraulic forks. 200mm wheel travel

Rear Suspension

Monolever swinging arm. 170mm wheel travel

Front Brakes

Single 260mm disc

Rear Brakes

200mm drum

Front Tyre

3.00- 21

Rear Tyre

4.00-18

Wet-Weight

 205 Kg

Fuel Capacity 

32  Litres
Review mc24.no  GS pages
Manual 5united.net  /  Owner manual

The R80GS earns its place as being one of the world's biggest and fastest off-road bikes. It is very good on the road but not so good on the dirt. The GS stands for Gelanden Strasse or street scrambler. BMW call it 'a hobby bike, a two-wheeled Range Rover' and the comparison is appropriate. It is not a serious dirt bike but it is one of the best all-purpose bikes ever built. Suitably beefed-up factory versions have won the gruelling Paris to Dakar rally on three occasions. In stock production form, the GS80 has proved a popular choice for riders exploring the world on long distance trips across continents with all types of terrain. It is a 100 mph road bike that can cope with the rough stuff.

 The machine is an imaginative mix of parts that were already available on other BMW bikes, spiced with some adventurous engineering. An example is BMW's patented 'mono-lever' rear suspension, a one sided swing-arm with a single gas shock unit. In effect, it is half a swing-arm, but BMW's engineers made it both lighter and 50 per cent stronger than a conventional assembly. The rear wheel is held on by three bolts, there is nothing you could call an axle.

The wheel bearing is big, the crown wheel housing is internally stressed since it has to carry the full loads of the back wheel with 6.7in of travel available, and the whole rear suspension works admirably. Quick wheel changing is obviously a bonus.  The front suspension consists of leading axle forks offering a luxurious 7.9in of travel. The bike is tall and needs to be for reasonable ground clearance (8.58in). The steering is quick and the throttle response lively. The whole machine is light and nimble with plenty of power and very good brakes. Like all flat twin BMWs, it has a low centre of gravity, so the bike can be chucked around with abandon.

The dual-purpose, knobbly tyres are S-rated and give wonderful grip. The engine is an updated variant of the R80 road bike endowed with typical BMW performance - bags of torque and a wide spread of power - plus some dual-purpose innovations. The bike has a light-weight clutch and flywheel for quicker throttle response, and some low gearing; necessary for a dirt bike but lots of fun anywhere since it helps the GS to wheelie easily. On the open road it will hold 100 mph for as long as the rider can face sitting up so high and exposed against the wind. Unfortunately what makes it good on the tarmac tells against it on the dirt. The bike is just too big and too powerful. Fully gassed (4.3gal) it weighs 4101b, fine for a road bike but a little heavy for serious off-road use. In addition there is the long wheelbase, the unsprung weight of the driveshaft and two horizontal cylinders that stick out a long way, all factors that conspire against its dirt ability.

These are not problems when traction is positive on firm ground but in mud and real rough stuff, the bike bogs down far too easily.  The R80GS is best used as a cross-country bike, sticking mainly to proper roads but taking the odd short cut and back road where necessary. Above all else, the bike is a lot of fun to ride; it is a functional, practical, rugged and reliable all-rounder. Recently, various BMW importers have released Paris-Dakar replica versions of the bike as a tribute to one of the world's most successful desert racers.

Source of review : The Worlds Fastest Motorcycles by Michael Scott & John Cutts

 

 

 

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