Tim Shepherd wrote:A friend brought me his 1993 R100GS with a problem. It starts and runs fine up to about 4500 rpm, but under load in top gear (passing or climbing a hill) and it starts to shake. Feels like one carb is getting starved for fuel. I pulled the bowls off to have a look see and found it had been converted to the independent black alcohol proof floats. These are not covered in any BMW manual, does anyone know the method for checking fuel levels and set up for these? Is it the same level as with stock floats, or do I need to buy a Bing manual? Also found it was low on motor oil, one carb was cocked about 15 degrees off plumb, there was water in the transmission oil and the white o-ring and shim in the oil filter cover was installed backwards. Other than that...

I've started with a full tune up and oil change.
That shuddering sounds a little like a holed diaphragm in one carb. I've had that experience on a couple of bikes. Can you induce a shudder in, say, 4th gear by applying full or heavy throttle at low rpms? If not, then back to your line of inquiry.
Also, have you eliminated impaired fuel flow to the carbs as a possibility? Crossover tube OK and flow past the float needle OK?
I don't have any experience with those alcohol proof floats. I wonder if there is a way to hold the floats up while you carefully remove the float bowl and compare the levels of the residual fuel in each of the bowls.
I also wonder if you can weigh the alcohol proof floats and determine if one side has heavier floats. You might already have a digital postal scale which would do the job.
About the water in the transmission oil, do you know how it got in? You probably already know that the "usual" way the water gets in there is to dribble down the speedometer cable, past the rubber boot, and into the transmission. Happened on my R100/7.
Lastly, if your inquiry points to the floats, what about simply buying a new set of stock floats and installing them? If you don't need them you just don't need them yet. I keep a new set of floats in stock because I know there will come a day when on of my bikes suffers from a heavy float.
Ken