Friday, March 02, 2007

Not My Weekend

Rebecca and I rode up to Hico last Saturday for a TWTex pie run at the Koffee Kup Family Restaurant.

The day started out with a little rain storm as we were leaving Houston and then culminated in some of the windiest, dustiest weather I’ve ever ridden in….which contributed to less than stellar gas mileage on the R1200ST’s part and less than stellar decision making on my part.

Read Rebecca’s ride report for the day on her blog here.

Having spent the night with a friend in Huntsville, I planned a nice relaxing Sunday enjoying some east Texas Piney Woods riding.

The day started with a dash of adrenaline as I used my ABS to avoid colliding with a left-turning farm truck that decided to ignore my approach and then stop in the middle of my lane. The event was made more exciting by the waiting truck following the original truck, which was taking up the other lane, giving me no escape route.

I grabbed a sandwich and a peach iced tea at a Sonic Diner in Onalaska, enjoying the beautiful blue skies and light cool breeze. The relaxation and refreshment seemed to set a tone for my ride.

I ran down the roads, heading further and further northeast. The BMW was running perfectly, traffic was minimal, and each field of lush green grass or waving evergreen bough seemed to be exclaiming “Spring is coming!”

Cresting a hill on FM942 east of Leggett, I suddenly found a long 2x6 with a few other misc boards nailed to it (part of a pallet?) taking up most of my lane.

I immediately braked on reflex and then got off the brakes to cross the lumber with neutral input.

It felt like a piece of the wood was caught in my wheel, or perhaps caught between the wheel and the engine. I pulled my speed down carefully, trying not to aggravate the oscillation in my handlebars. Pulling to a stop about 1/8 mile down the road, I deployed my kickstand and dismounted to see the damage.



After a few minutes of well-deserved swearing, I dug in my tankbag to find my cellphone. My tri-mode Verizon phone had one bar of service, but it was enough to interrupt my parents’ relaxing afternoon at home and get them into my truck for the 115 mile (each way) drive to pick me up.

The 2.5 hour wait wasn’t all that bad, actually. I relaxed with a book in the combined shade of my bike and the surrounding trees. The culvert next to the road contained a stony creek, babbling over the rocks.

Many of the cars that passed me stopped to offer help. A couple of them stand out in my memory.

One older gentleman in a work truck pulled up behind the R1200ST about 1 hour into my wait. He was a fellow rider and had seen me sitting there in a previous pass but was busy at the time. He helped me move the R1200ST closer to the shoulder (the bend in the wheel rim was making it difficult to roll).

A group of men in a pickup passed heading toward town early into my wait. Seeing the coolers in the back, I asked if they had any water. They apologized, but offered me a bottle of beer, which I declined. Passing the other direction half an hour later, they stopped to hand me a cold bottled water and wished me luck with my wait.

Mom and Dad finally showed up with the truck around 4:45pm, shortly after I had dug a jacket out of my luggage to ward against the growing evening chill. With some difficulty, we loaded the BMW into the truck and tied it down.

Coming into Houston on US59, we were passed by a huge procession of cruisers. There must have been at least 100 bikes. Red-faced, I sank into my seat and mentally apologized to the R1200ST for the ignominy of being seen on the back of a truck by so many motorcyclists.

I have a few more pictures from the ride that will be posted eventually.

What’s next?

Tomorrow I’m going to be stripping down the front wheel and taking it to a highly recommended local wheel repair shop to see if anything can be done. A replacement wheel will cost roughly $700 from BMW, not counting the tire (which was coming due for replacement anyway). I’ve been unable to source a used wheel…. Those ST’s are just too rare.

I’ll also be taking the downtime to change the front brake pads, do my next valve adjust, and an oil change. The R1200ST is now past 24,000 miles.

4 comments:

Prof Wes said...

Try www.beemerboneyard.com - I've gotten lots of good used parts from them. Don't rely on the listing on the website tho - call or e-mail them.

Glad the bent rim is all that happened!

Biker Betty said...

Sorry to read about your front tire and hope it doesn't take much to fix it.

Anonymous said...

I'd strongly suggest not repairing the wheel, even if they say they can do it. That spot on the wheel will always be much weaker than the rest, and a slight impact on a pothole, rock, etc. could lead to sudden catastrophic failure. Its ok for a car with 4 wheels, but on a bike -- not worth the risk

Anonymous said...

Becca,
I really hope you were the one that bought the wheel(s) off ebay last week... Sorry I didn't see this sooner, or I would have mentioned it. I thought about buying them to have "just in case" but the bidding got a bit too rich for my blood for spare parts.

Sorry if that wasn't you. I hope this wasn't salt in your wounds.