Has anyone done any of these? Â Any improvements as a result? Â
Yes and No is my answer.
you may recall that a few months ago I pointed out how easy it is to balance the reciprocating parts of our R65s, just make a beam balance and balance up like for like.
Will you feel a difference worth the effort - I doubt it. Like wise you can spend a fortune and have the crank, flywheel (sorry Clutch carrier) and clutch all balanced up and I still doubt you will feel any difference. The reason is that the primary source of vibration in a boxer twin is the rocking couple of the UN-counterweighted big ends. The rocking couple can set up harmonic vibration in the frame which for some reason seems to bedevil the R65 more than any other model.
The other source of high speed vibration - about which you can do nothing by the way, is flex of the crank shaft.
BMW's own investigation into crank flex (which first became a real issue in the R90s) was to decided that they could not do anything about it and sole response was to increase the internal clearance of the alternator rotor to stator. I have seen a film of a R90 engine that had the crankcase "windowed" and the crank painted with a fluorescent dye which was when running photographed using a xenon strobe as a light source.
The amount of whip in the crank was initially quite sobering until I recalled that the streets were not littered with BMW twins with broken cranks (in fact I have never heard of one breaking in normal service) and after my own R100 passed the 200,000km mark I kind of decided that BMW's view of the world, namely to simply provide enough clearance to allow the crank to flex without rubbing anyhting, was the right one.
But, the crank flex is also a source of vibration about which you can do nothing. I've never held an R65 crank next to a R75/80/90/100 one, but I suspect that the R65 crank is probably stronger by virtue of the shorter webs whilst retaining pretty much the same diameters everywhere.
If you get the idea that I think that there is little useful you can do about the particular vibration in BMW airheads, you are right.
I do however think that the idea of loosening all the engine mounts and then carefully bringing them all up to the same torque is a good one.
I discount the assertion that cone couplers are a bad idea. Firstly BMW fitted them as OEM eventually and secondly, I haven't seen too many airheads parked by the side of the road with cracked frames (cracked sub-frames yet, but that is a cat of a different colour).
I have ridden R65s with and without aftermarket cone couplers and mty own r65 has them OEM. My opinion can be summed up as "if my BMW didn't all ready have them, or if I had all the spacers handy to dispense with them, I wouldn't bother, but I don't have the spacers and the couplers were available within 5 minutes of my office, so the couplers stay.