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Does your GT/GTL track straight or pull to the left or right?

  • GT/GTL runs straight as a arrow.

    Votes: 275 50%
  • GT/GTL pulls to the left.

    Votes: 274 50%
  • GT/GTL pulls to the right.

    Votes: 3 1%

Bike pulls to one side poll

95K views 304 replies 138 participants last post by  mayojuaf  
#1 ·
More than a few people have noticed their GT/GTL pulls to one side.

It would be informative to find out how many of you have a GT/GTL that exhibits this behavior. To answer the inevitable "don't take your hands of the handlebars" comment, a bike pulling to one side or another can result in more than a few issues, including abnormal tire wear.

To check whether the GT/GTL tracks straight or pulls to one side, find a quiet stretch of straight and level road. Engage the cruise control at 30-40 mph. Lift your hands gently off the bars (only takes a 1/2 inch for the less adventurous) and see if the bike tracks straight. If you have to move your body position to keep the bike tracking in a straight line, then that indicates pulling to the opposite side of the body lean.
 
#3 ·
Pulls to the left if you let go of the bars. I used to run my 07 K1200GT for miles down the road when my hands would get tired or just to re-adjust my gloves, helmet, etc. Both the demo (GTL) and my bike (GT) pull to the left hands-off. It's controllable with a little right cheek butt pressure but surprised me at first.
 
#4 ·
most bikes ive had pull one way or another, most recently the hd pulled to the left, so i simply rode with my tools and we weather gear in the rt saddle bag and.... strail down the road.

could handle bar mounted acessories cause some of this too? i put my water bottle and radar detector on rt side controler screws

fabbing up the hwy/stretch pegs right now, I am so fortuneate to have a metrics unilimited so close to my house, all the metric fasteners in ss that you ever wanted!
 
#28 ·
Quick question for the "straight as an arrow guys." Do you ride with your hands off of the bars? Because what I'm describing is a very weak effect and you wouldn't notice it even with a couple of fingers holding one grip. You gotta let go.
While this may appear to be specious, seems like this reply almost is looking for trouble. Most roads, at least here in FL have some camber and what you are suggesting is finding a road that's perfectly level. Does that road even exist? With all of my many, many, bikes, when I ride with no hands (rarely as why would I do that) I still have to apply some 'body english' to properly steer. And, this body english may or may not be the road nor steering alignment, but the minor adjustments my butt is making in my seat alignment.
 
#8 ·
If I engage the cruise control and take both hands off the bar, there is a slight pull to the left. However, if I disengage the cruise control and let the bike drift in neutral (not an easy gear, or lack thereof, to get to at 40+ mph) the bike is balanced, no pull one way or the other.
 
#9 ·
Funny you should mention that. I tried it as well (in neutral). Still a pull to the left.
 
#16 ·
The first order of business is for everyone to report it both to the dealer and to call BMWNA at 1-800-831-1117.

You can also send an email to Laurence Kuykendall (Laurence.Kuykendall@bmwna.com).
 
#19 · (Edited)
I've been holding off on posting in this thread because my bike has spent the last 2.5 wks at my dealer for this problem, and I just heard from my Service Manager (who is a great guy, and after he rode my bike, said something along the lines of "wow -- well, Mark, I can't call you crazy (to which I responded "well at least not on this" ;)) -- it really pulls; I'll see what NA has to say."

At the time I took my bike in, BMWNA apparently stated that they had only heard of *one* other case of this issue :)huh:). On the other hand, we all are starting to hear of quite a few bikes with varying degrees to "pull." It also appears that this is a more common problem than I had hoped, as 2-3 other K16s currently in my dealer's shop *all* have at least a light left pull.

My bike's pull I believe is on the "more" end of the spectrum, and will have to be addressed one way or the other, as several hours of having to constantly maintain a moderate countersteering pressure in order to keep the bike from veering off the road is totally unacceptable -- BTDT (see below) and the resulting arm/shoulder/back cramps from maintaining the pressure on long rides was/is impossible to "just live with."

A bit of background, and a couple comments on posts above:

It's very likely not a problem that can be fixed.
That's what they said about my hard-right pulling 1999 R1100RT.

Actually, what the regional rep wrote at the time was "Bike pulls right when hands are removed from bars. Don't remove hands from bars" -- that was an UNBELIEVABLY galling, infuriating and insulting statement !!!!! A bike which requires constant, cramp-producing countersteering pressure to avoid veering off the road is NOT a "normal" or "acceptable" bike -- whether or not hands are on the bars!

So faced with an "incurable" problem and the associated muscle cramps it was causing by having to maintain a constant countersteer to go straight, I decided I'd take a shot at curing the incurable problem.

On the R1100/1150RT, the right swingarm pivot is fixed, and the left pivot bolt is used to set the desired bearing pre-load. A bit of back of the envelope calculation said that moving my RT's swingarm 2 mm to the right should put the tires in proper alignment. After removing the right swing arm pivot (a WITCH of a job that took several hours -- long story), a large, 2 mm-thick washer was installed under the head of the right pivot bolt, spacing the pivot 2 mm to the right and thereby allowing the left pivot bolt to move the swingarm 2 mm to the right. Took the bike out for a ride and -- whaddayaknow -- straight down the road with no hands.

The point of recounting the above is not to suggest I'm a genius or magician -- I'm just another customer that knows which end of the screwdriver to hold. The point is that there was no reason why a solution could not be found if someone wanted to do so back then, and the same holds true today.

Quick question for the "straight as an arrow guys." Do you ride with your hands off of the bars? Because what I'm describing is a very weak effect and you wouldn't notice it even with a couple of fingers holding one grip. You gotta let go.
Different degrees on different bikes -- my pull is readily evident whether hands are on or off the bars. Overloading the right saddlebag and literally hanging my tail out to the right is needed to put enough weight over to the right to noticably counter the pull.

(BTW, before anyone says it, this is not an issue with road crown, the pull is either bad with one direction of road crown, or it's worse with the opposite road crown).

Good point. Which way does the driveshaft rotate. It's possible the counter torque from the engine into the frame causes it to lean to the left. It this is true then when you let off the throttle it should turn right?:)
No -- the shaft may turn in one direction, but their are reaction forces at the other end as well, and the primary force at the crown wheel is a tangentially-oriented downward force (with light reaction forces as the tapered gears try to laterally separate). There is nothing from the shaft which could influence the bike's steering direction (unless the application of torque was enough to cause the rear wheel to toe left or right a lot as the drive torque is applied -- something that should be plainly visible as bearing play with 9-3 o'clock rear wheel rocking).

Bloody thing pulls to the left: after riding straight as an arrow in my K12GT, back to the bad old days of both my RT's which pulled left.

So how can this be fixed, does anyone at BMW care?
Does BMWNA care? Yeah, I believe they do, as they are obviously smart enough to realize that significant bike-class-type problems (like the last decade's final drive problems) are very damaging to BMW's reputation and result in lost sales.

That said, BMW AG and NA have loooong been known for absolutely not providing information on problems :mad: , even when they are plainly aware of them and are working to fix them (for example, during the FD problem era, failed FD's were being shipped back to AG for analysis, but we customers were never given an iota of information as to what they found).

The driveshaft rotates to the right, to turn the rear wheel forward, so yep that would twist the bike over to the left.
Sorry, nope -- visualize this as a free body diagram -- for the shaft to be applying a force (torque) to the crown gear, the other end has to have a corresponding reaction force (torque) -- and the force at the FD crown gear is tangentially downward, not a torque about the longitudinal axis -- the mere fact that a torque is being apllied to a shaft about its axis of rotation does not mean the axis is aligned in the right manner to cause the bike to rotate as postulated (in this case, there's no net rotational force about the yaw axis which can result from the shaft's rotation, nor a rotation about the tires' foot prints to rotate the bike over).

Trying the no hands in neutral gives me no pull. but mine does pull left. As i said above, ill just put the tools in the right bag and roll with it.
Alas, I can't put enough weight in the saddlebag to completely offset my pull.

And in any event, why should I have to lose most/all of the space in a saddlebag, and have to tote around a big bike-slowing, handling-effecting lump in a saddlebag, in order to get the bike to ride in a straight line??????? To accept that as "normal" or "ok" is wrong.


If we were to contact BMW I am pretty certain they would ask why we have our hands off of the handlebars anyway,
See their response 12 years ago, above!


SO, as of this afternoon, I need to decide whether I want to go to the trouble of investigating and attempting to fix this problem by myself again, or whether I want to start the process with the aim of ultimately forcing a bike buy-back.

This does not look like it will be as simple an issue to fix as my R11RT, as I've already looked, and there does not appear to be any room left to move the swingarm to the left before it contacts the inside of the main frame (with a left pull, either the rear wheel needs to move to the left, or the front wheel needs to be moved to the right).

I'll be poking about the front of the bike next -- Duolever A-arm mounting mods? mismachined or misassembled main frame at the swingarm pivots? other? Dunno -- have to decide whether I want to deal with an issue I should have to be dealing with in the first place. :(
 
#18 ·
The driveshaft rotates to the right, to turn the rear wheel forward, so yep that would twist the bike over to the left. Trying the no hands in neutral gives me no pull. but mine does pull left. As i said above, ill just put the tools in the right bag and roll with it.

If we were to contact BMW I am pretty certain they would ask why we have our hands off of the handlebars anyway, this is the same company that didnt put cupholders in cars because they took away from the driving experience.
 
#289 ·
The driveshaft rotates to the right, to turn the rear wheel forward, so yep that would twist the bike over to the left. Trying the no hands in neutral gives me no pull. but mine does pull left. As i said above, ill just put the tools in the right bag and roll with it.
Good point. Which way does the driveshaft rotate. It's possible the counter torque from the engine into the frame causes it to lean to the left. It this is true then when you let off the throttle it should turn right?:)
Based on the shape of the final drive case, I'd guess the shaft rotates to the right (i.e. the top of the shaft moves right) during forward travel of the bike.

But I don't think the driveshaft is the cause of the left pull. Thought experiment: say you're climbing a very steep hill at constant speed, 1st gear. Really really steep. There will be a large amount of torque at the front of the shaft, trying to lean the bike to the left. But the final drive feels the exact same torque in the opposite direction, canceling the effect. There would be no net torque to cause the bike to lean over.

There should be a small effect when the bike (and therefore the shaft) is accelerating or decelerating. Accelerating should cause a left leaning reaction due to the fact that the mass of the driveshaft (and transmission output, and final drive pinion) are speeding up. This would be especially noticeable during a burnout, if it were possible to do on a K1600 - since the back wheel accelerates almost instantly in that case. The opposite should occur during deceleration, maxing out if the rear wheel were to lock up (if ABS didn't intervene). However I think the effect would be so small as to be insignificant, correct me if I'm wrong about that.

Final point, if this were an inherent feature of the shaft drive, then all K1600's (all shaft drive bikes in fact) would do it and that's not the case.
 
#23 ·
The VIN number after the "ZZ" will give a rough estimate of when it was assembled.
 
#24 ·
You know, I had originally voted no, no pull to the left. But thinking about it after reading all the responses, I realized that my bike is definitely pulling to the left. I've been on some long highway rides, and with the cruise engaged I have to maintain pressure on the clutch side of the bars to keep the bike in line. That's led to a lot of shoulder cramps, pain in between my shoulder blades and I had no idea why - now I think I do.

So how do we fix this? Mark, you seem to have had the biggest issues, and you're the only one going through the formal steps with BMW to get it addressed. Any ideas? I'm honestly not interested in letting my dealer have my bike for 2-1/2 weeks to investigate this...I need something more definitive (a fix) that they can implement. I'm not confident they'll be able to track down the problem on their own.
 
#30 ·
Since the issue seems across the world, and on roads where we ride on the correct side ( ;) ) then I suspect the camber is not the issue.

I have a recurring back problem that had disappeared on my K12GT, but caused me endless hurt on my R1200RT's (two of them) both of which pulled to the left. The K12GT ran true as a die.

I'll be pursuing this a bit further to see if the back pain on the K16GT is related to the pulling left rather than the seating position :(
 
#32 ·
Thanks for the advice, but I had a vague idea of the different seating on my bikes ;)

My back injury was a twisting wrench when I had a helicopter accident and pulled hard enough to break the collective when trying to cushion the impact. ISTM that if I am constantly pushing (even slightly) with my left arm to keep the RT and K16 straight, it is following the line of that accident injury.

The other helicopter pilots here will testify to the awkward seating position of a helicopter, and any exacerbation of that in keeping a bike straight is not a Good Thing :nah:
 
#34 ·
Today I cured the significant left pull on my GTL. :gm

As soon as I can get a "how to" with pics together, I will start a new thread.
Awesome news Mark - I can't wait to hear how you did it! I was riding down the highway today at 65-75 mph and set the cruise and took my hands off the bars, the bike immediately pulled to the left.
 
#36 ·
Every time a thread like this is started, there's always someone that posts "it's the road crown," as if none of us have heard that idea before or haven't taken it into account. Well, duh.

Not only did my bike pull left on left crown, right crown and perfectly level pavement, I believe there's a pretty good chance it would have pulled left on the banking at Talladega!

Thanks -- suggestion noted, appropriately filed.
 
#46 ·
Btw, I did mention this to the service manager after the thread first started and his response was it is the drive shaft and RT's do it as well.
Heard this before; roll my eyes every time I hear it. Do the people who espouse this idiocy really believe BMW AG doesn't know how to build a motorcycle which is balanced?? Or that during the *massive* amount of testing before production, that BMW AG's engineers said "ja, it's ok that it pulls to the side, the heavy final drive is on the left"?? Or that BMW AG doesn't know they need to account for the weight of components located off the center line???

The variability of this issue also confirms that this isn't a result of the drive's location -- if it were the drive shaft's weight/location, they *all* would be pulling. But they don't.
 
#50 ·
GT guy here -

I haven't noticed any kind of unusual pull under normal riding conditions so far ... as a matter of fact, the bike feels very neutral and stable.

But having said that, I do have to admit to having experienced some amount of slight directional change when my hands were off the bars on all the bikes I've owned.

I'd always just assumed it was either the road crown, or cross-wind related, or the fact that since my total hip replacement 15 years ago, I don't sit "perfectly straight" on the seat anyway. (Wait. Can't be that one, I've been riding 41 years now)

Maybe I'm just not sensitive enough to it, but on the other hand, I haven't had any of those 10-hour Interstate days yet either. :eek:

I'm gonna say mine doesn't have that issue ...


But just to stir the pot, that's probably because it's a red one :lurk2: