Awesome video sir! I was considering doing this myself on my 2017 f700GS, as I do most other maintenance. But now I know this is more than I'm ready to take on. Thanks from Daytona Florida!
Thanks man. And if you give yourself plenty of time, this is not too bad of a job. It will be worth the dollar savings. Well I guess depending on how much money you make per hour LOL. Might be better off just paying somebody sometimes. Good luck in either case and thanks you from Bucks County Pa!
Great vid. Think I will tackle my bike after watching this. Definitely more complex than an old air-cooled Honda but still manageable with time and patience.
should have just adjusted the cyl 1 intake while your in there your like .002mm from out of spec, also bmw does a liquid gasket right on the head all the way around then the rubber gasket then the head cover torqued to 10 Nm spark plugs torqued to 18 Nm and that smaller internal gasket is directional.
Good tips. I'm not sure I plan on keeping this bike for very long, so it didn't seem worth it to adjust them since they were already in Spec. Plus I didn't want to have to wait on ordering shims since I was using the bike that weekend. And good point about the liquid gasket. I'll have to look into that. But so far no seepage at all so I think I'll be okay.
Throughout all my years I've never seen a manufacturer put adhesive or silicone on the whole valve cover gasket surface. just on those rubber half moons and around them
@@fatpitch3 good to know! Thanks so much for clarifying that! I was pretty sure I did it correct. I've done probably a hundred valve cover gaskets in my life on various vehicles
I know this video is old, but where did you get those clearance numbers? Citing the maintenance DVD it's supposed to be Intake 0.23-0.33 Exhaust 0.30-0.41 in millimeters, cold engine.
Interesting. I wonder what the factory service manual says. Is that the factory DVD? I just did some searching around when I did mine and those were the numbers I found on a few different forms. Since they match them to one another I figured they were accurate. I just looked it up and found this site. Which shows the numbers I used. www.motorcycleparts-hornig.com/BMW-F650-GS-F-700-GS-and-F-800-GS/Maintenance-interval-service/
But let me know what you find out, I'm very curious. It would be a shame if I published the wrong numbers. Or maybe they changed them at some point and updated them?
@@NoNonsenseKnowHow it's the factory DVD, and for a 2009 as mine is too. Weird. The diff isn't huge though, and should be good anyway, it's just a bit irritating that with those numbers my valves are within spec. Meh, I already ordered the shims and they will then be in the looser end of tolerance and should last ages. EDIT: The DVD is from 2013, maybe the specs got revised?
@@folxam got you. Yeah maybe they did get revised. Let me know if you happen to get to the bottom of it. I suppose better to be a little bit loose anyway since the valves will only continue to seat into the head overtime
about to tackle this. Hopefully all within speck at 30 000km.EDIT: Completed the job. Exhaust .20mm. new shims now around .32mm but its very loud and sounds way looser. intake all still in spec.
dayum, that thing has much stuff everywhere to move. nice machine though you can ride that around the world and know its getting there with no issues. hope everything is going well for you been a while since i been on. seems like every time i turn around i have a major job to do on something.......damn MOPAR crap lol
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Awesome video sir! I was considering doing this myself on my 2017 f700GS, as I do most other maintenance. But now I know this is more than I'm ready to take on. Thanks from Daytona Florida!
Thanks man. And if you give yourself plenty of time, this is not too bad of a job. It will be worth the dollar savings. Well I guess depending on how much money you make per hour LOL. Might be better off just paying somebody sometimes. Good luck in either case and thanks you from Bucks County Pa!
Great vid. Think I will tackle my bike after watching this. Definitely more complex than an old air-cooled Honda but still manageable with time and patience.
Valve clearance tolerance is suprisingly big. My 1983 honda has intake 0.010 and exhaust 0.014
should have just adjusted the cyl 1 intake while your in there your like .002mm from out of spec, also bmw does a liquid gasket right on the head all the way around then the rubber gasket then the head cover torqued to 10 Nm spark plugs torqued to 18 Nm and that smaller internal gasket is directional.
Good tips. I'm not sure I plan on keeping this bike for very long, so it didn't seem worth it to adjust them since they were already in Spec. Plus I didn't want to have to wait on ordering shims since I was using the bike that weekend. And good point about the liquid gasket. I'll have to look into that. But so far no seepage at all so I think I'll be okay.
Throughout all my years I've never seen a manufacturer put adhesive or silicone on the whole valve cover gasket surface. just on those rubber half moons and around them
@@NoNonsenseKnowHow I have BMW manual for this bike, it recommends only using sealant on the half-moons and just a bit beyond.
@@fatpitch3 good to know! Thanks so much for clarifying that! I was pretty sure I did it correct. I've done probably a hundred valve cover gaskets in my life on various vehicles
dielectric grease, the right stuff. nice and tidy one. sub'd
Thanks! I appreciate that
I know this video is old, but where did you get those clearance numbers? Citing the maintenance DVD it's supposed to be Intake 0.23-0.33 Exhaust 0.30-0.41 in millimeters, cold engine.
Interesting. I wonder what the factory service manual says. Is that the factory DVD? I just did some searching around when I did mine and those were the numbers I found on a few different forms. Since they match them to one another I figured they were accurate. I just looked it up and found this site. Which shows the numbers I used. www.motorcycleparts-hornig.com/BMW-F650-GS-F-700-GS-and-F-800-GS/Maintenance-interval-service/
But let me know what you find out, I'm very curious. It would be a shame if I published the wrong numbers. Or maybe they changed them at some point and updated them?
In either case, as long as they have a touch of clearance and they're not tapping then all is well in my opinion
@@NoNonsenseKnowHow it's the factory DVD, and for a 2009 as mine is too. Weird. The diff isn't huge though, and should be good anyway, it's just a bit irritating that with those numbers my valves are within spec. Meh, I already ordered the shims and they will then be in the looser end of tolerance and should last ages.
EDIT: The DVD is from 2013, maybe the specs got revised?
@@folxam got you. Yeah maybe they did get revised. Let me know if you happen to get to the bottom of it. I suppose better to be a little bit loose anyway since the valves will only continue to seat into the head overtime
about to tackle this. Hopefully all within speck at 30 000km.EDIT: Completed the job. Exhaust .20mm. new shims now around .32mm but its very loud and sounds way looser. intake all still in spec.
Exhaust was out of spec on mine at 74.000 km. It also was very loud after the change. Ticking noise
dayum, that thing has much stuff everywhere to move. nice machine though you can ride that around the world and know its getting there with no issues. hope everything is going well for you been a while since i been on. seems like every time i turn around i have a major job to do on something.......damn MOPAR crap lol
Yeah things are going pretty good. Sounds like you're staying busy which is good!. Hope things are well. And yeah the BMW's are pretty Rock Solid
Do you knoew the torque value for the cams themselves by any chance?
can you make a video on servicing swing arm
Nice vid
my 09 800GS sits at 62K do y think valve clearance is still in specs?? , probably nobody never touched it since new ...
My guess would be yeah they are probably still in Spec. But I would definitely check them ASAP. Let me know what you find
@@NoNonsenseKnowHow yes. and what happing with timing chain does it get stretched at that kilometers?
@@dejanmeki I'm not aware of any timing chain issues with these engines. Should be good. Unless it's making noise
@@NoNonsenseKnowHow I had to replace my timing chain at around 70.000 km. It was half a link longer.
Pretty disappointed that I watched this entire video and you didn't mention one time how to actually make the adjustment.
Mine didn't need an adjustment
Lol video on valve clearance doesn't even show you how to adjust, thanks for waisting my time ffs