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 BMW K1 – bargain classic (by Ian Falloon, Apr 2022) ![]() The K1's
                  wild styling represented a different era 
 
 
 Modern motorcycles are
                uniformly excellent but generally their style and design
                reflects certain
                conformity. As a result most motorcycles of a particular
                type look remarkably
                similar, be it Adventure, Supersports, Naked or Touring.
                 With developmental
                costs so high manufacturers nowadays are reluctant to
                take huge marketing risks
                but thirty years ago it was quite different. During the
                1980s there was
                experimentation with 16-inch wheels, anti-dive brakes,
                turbochargers, unusual
                engine layouts and bold styling.  BMW was always a
                conservative manufacturer but they also chose an unusual
                path with the
                four-cylinder K100 in 1983. In the midst of this
                experimentation BMW also
                decided the time was ripe for a shaft drive high
                performance Superbike, the K1.
                They wanted the K1 to stand out from the crowd, and when
                it was first displayed
                at the Cologne Show at the end of 1988, the K1 shattered
                the perception of BMW
                as a producer of boring touring motorcycles.  As BMW was committed
                to the voluntary 100 horsepower limit for motorcycles
                sold in Germany at the
                time they concentrated on improving aerodynamics to
                obtain high performance.
                The large enveloping two-piece front mudguard almost
                mated the leading edges of
                the seven-piece fairing that joined to a large tail with
                miniature panniers.  The drag coefficient
                was a remarkable 0.34 with the rider prone, by far the
                lowest of any production
                motorcycle in 1988. The colour scheme of bright red or
                blue with yellow
                graphics and highlighting was bold, and almost bizarre.
                Totally unlike any
                other motorcycle, BMW certainly couldn’t be criticised
                for following the crowd. There was much more to
                the K1 than its aerodynamic bodywork. For the first time
                on a BMW motorcycle
                the cylinder head incorporated four valves per cylinder,
                the twin overhead
                camshafts acting directly on bucket tappets without
                adjustment shims. The
                four-cylinder engine retained the K100’s dimensions of
                67x70 mm, but the engine
                management system was a digital Motronic, similar to
                those on BMW cars. The
                power was right on 100 horsepower, produced at a
                moderate 8,000 rpm.  The chassis components
                were also quite radical for a BMW street bike in the
                1980s. The tubular steel
                frame was much stronger than the K100, and the wide
                17-inch wheels were shod
                with low profile with radial tyres.  Complementing the
                wheels and tyres were upgraded suspension and brakes,
                the K1 using the
                Paralever swingarm from the dual-purpose GS models, with
                a single gas-charged
                Bilstein shock absorber. As the swingarm incorporated an
                additional U-joint,
                the wheelbase stretched out to a cumbersome 1,565 mm.  Italian components
                abounded, the front 41.7 mm fork from Marzocchi, the
                wheels FPS, and the brakes
                Brembo. Four-piston calipers gripped the twin floating
                spirally drilled 305 mm
                front brake discs and ABS was optional. It all added up
                to an impressive
                specification, on paper at least. The K1 was designed
                for high-speed use, and the uncompromised riding
                position accentuated this. But
                with a dry weight of 234 kg the K1 failed in its quest
                to offer leading
                Superbike performance.  The engine, while
                providing a superb broad powerband with excellent fuel
                economy, just wasn’t
                powerful enough to overcome this weight obstacle. And
                although the Paralever
                provided a vast improvement in overcoming the inherent
                deficiencies of shaft
                drive on a sporting motorcycle, it still couldn’t
                disguise the considerable
                unsprung weight.  Despite these
                deficiencies the K1 was the best handling and strongest
                performing BMW
                motorcycle to date. More suited to high-speed long
                distance riding than
                outright sports use the K1 remains a formidable machine
                in this context. The radical styling
                wasn’t a total success so the colours were toned down
                for 1991, with a more
                subdued classic black metallic, with silver wheels. But
                even this couldn’t save
                the K1 and by the end of 1993 it was dead.  Today the K1 remains
                an important symbol of BMW’s increasing technological
                status that emerged
                during the 1980s. Many of its features were landmark at
                the time and have
                become the norm. The K1 also represents the end of an
                era, one before the onset
                of sophisticated marketing surveys where bold and brave
                designs were created
                without knowing if they would be successful.  Because it is so
                unique, for those who know and can appreciate it for
                what it is the K1 is now
                increasingly sought after as a future classic. Expensive
                when new, they are
                still very cheap and one of the best bargain classics
                available. ------------------------------------------------- Produced by AllMoto abn 61 400 694 722  | 
          
             
 
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