BMW S1000RR 2016 Ecu Tuning
“If I have seen further than others, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants”

I think this quote is more apt than any other when talking about this bike.
The 2016 BMW s1000rr is a one of the highest peaks you could find, particularly in term of motorcycle technology. The BMS-X ECU installed on this bike is a beast, but as always I want to do more, to see more …. Its just nobody quite told me the height of the giant I would have to climb in order to see the farthest.
But when Andrew dropped in his s1000rr to have me go through it that’s exactly what I wanted to do.
Now while the older generation is not an easy beast to master in it owns right. The BMS-X ECU installed in the later generation is an entirely different kettle of fish. For one, there is no plug in adapter that allows you to interface with ECU. The second, being that nobody else has managed this yet in Ireland so just everything about this project had to be done from scratch.
My head hurt just even trying to comprehend how much is actually involved in the building of a map for this thing.
The first, and probably the biggest issue, is getting the information sorted on the ECU from the bike so it can be diagnosed, tweaked, edited, tested and then ultimately all put back together and get the bike up on the dyno.
The only real approach to take to this is to remove the ECU from the bike, strip the ECU housing down to get the sweet nugget center inside! After that, trick the ECU into thinking it is still plugged into the bike and read all the information off it! Simply really …. Only its not …. Not at all … not even remotely!
But once we had all the info downloaded off the ECU, and firmly back inside my wheelhouse, it was time to work my magic fingers over the numbers and create something that is truly special.
So, try wrap your heads around this beauty, getting rid of the underwhelming throttle response at stock and replace it with a cleaner, more linear and aggressive throttle response right where you’d drive it. So all thought gains are right where you feel them most!
Oh, and I did it without removing the lambda sensors so I can keep it in a closed loop so fuel consumption wouldn’t be greatly effected and I left the rain map alone just because I didn’t want to give people a lot of brown trouser moments when they get stuck in the rain.
Impressive, right? Well not as impressive as the results:
40%TPS before and after flash.

And just for the crack here’s the big one at 100% TPS

This takes an extraordinary amount of time to do to a bike so if you’re thinking of getting a map flashed to your bike, please note that it will take an entire day to tune your bike on the dyno because of all the steps involved. The total cost for this map would be 550euro
Alternatively, you could post your ECU to us and we can build you a custom map for a standard of full exhaust system. Depending on what you have installed on your bike, All our postal maps have been built in house on our dyno, the cost of which would be 400euro
The results are absolutely worth the price of admission and if you don’t believe me just read what Andrew had to say about his bike.
“Its been few days now since got back my 2016 S1000rr, Gary fitted a full arrow system and ecu flash and map and my god the difference is un-real the bikes response is mind blowing and nice 205bhp thanks again”
And if you have never heard what 205 fire spitting ponies sounds like then you have to check out our videos of the dyno runs on this bike. Just head over to our Facebook page or click the link below
https://www.facebook.com/mototuningireland/videos/1921145217903292/
Until our next adventure,
Gary
More Power = More Smiles
- Published in BMW, Motorcycles Remapped
BMW F800R Ecu Tuning
“Don’t you just hate it when the power isn’t where you want it to be?”
That was the greeting I got as Darragh rolled into the workshop the other day. I had been expecting him to show up at any minute but that’s still not the thing you expect out of motorcycle rider, especially when he is sitting on his bike.
After the confusion of what he was trying to explain to me left. He started to talk about what was going on with his bike. The 800cc parallel twin engine is putting out a healthy 80+ bhp but when we got down to it this wasn’t actually what his gripe was with the bike.
You see Darragh explained that while cruising down the motorways and going to overtake someone the bike had a very substantial feel of lacking in power and the same was said on long cornering too.
So, first thing first then …
Trying to get a feeling that someone has on there bike and turning into data to be manipulated.
Not an easy task I can tell you but there’s no point harping on about it so …
Up onto the dyno she goes!
As always the first thing I want to do is establish base line reading for the bike I’m dealing with. No two bikes are ever the same so this is absolutely essential to the process.
After running a few sweep tests I was able to see areas I could improve upon although not ones that directly addressed what Darragh was “feeling”
It wasn’t I ran a sweep test at 50% throttle that I noticed the dip in the power between the 4k and 5k mark in the rpm range.
So now that I found the problem, time to fix it right?
But why just address one area when I can make improvements across the board?
So I had a little sit down with him and told him what I thought we could achieve within the stock confines of the bike.
With the first flash of the Ecu some custom ignition editing and took place, with some fuelling edits added in for good measure. The bike was then run on the Dyno again and gains were instantly made across the board. But of course, this was only the first attempt and it can always be better …
So after many hours, ringing ears (if you have ever been in a small box with your motorcycle going full chat, you know what I’m talking about) and sore fingertips from all the software edits I was a lot happier with how the bike performed on the dyno.
The graph below shows how much power is lost in the 4-5k region in stock mapping and how much it can be improved upon.
What it doesn’t show you it exactly how much of a difference that makes to you the rider.
“… It doesn’t make sense?You Say! … How can the bike feel and behave so much differently without any different parts?
Darragh
“The power is so much crisper and it’s so much easier to get on the power when you want. It’s like it went from being a docile commuter to a bike that always just wants to go …”
So if you believe that your bike could benefit from same things that Darragh’s did, and lets be honest who doesn’t? Why not get in touch today and see exactly how much we can benefit your bike for the everyday.
- Published in blog, BMW, Motorcycles Remapped
BMW R9T Custom on dyno ecu Tuning
This BMW R9T was dropped to me by a motorcyclist who has a love for bmw motorcycles and is not the first bmw he has owned . The owner of this R9T had been down the aftermarket fuel controller route in the past with his previous BMWs and never really got the results he had hoped for . (more…)
- Published in BMW, Motorcycles Remapped
Bmw GS 1200 Adventure
I was dropped the BMW gs 1200 adventure a while back with some modification carried out by the owner. He had removed the ex valve and also removed the catalytic converter. Steve was having some low down stutter / snatchy throttle issues causing him to slip the clutch sometimes in slow moving traffic. At the best of times the BMW can be a little lumpy low down but the problem was amplified with the modifactions which were carried out . (more…)
- Published in blog, BMW, Motorcycles Remapped, Uncategorized










