Some perspective: I inherited this bike from a buddy who passed away. When I got the bike I thought it was terrible. It was frightening to ride, real white knuckle stuff. When I got over the initial shock of that, I figured the bike can't be
that bad, and even if I was just going to sell it, it was going to need some attention.
I found an unbelievable amount of nuts and bolts loose including the mounts for the handle bar risers, which were so loose the bars could rock back and forth about a half inch, and even the steering bearings were loose. I also found all of the damping adjusters to be screwed in to almost full stiff. And the rear shock spring was preloaded so tight it took me about 25 full turns backing off the preload to get
ANY free sag. Then I had to back it off some more to get a nice comfortable inch or so of free sag.
With the sag and the damping adjustments set to reasonable settings, and with all of the loose nuts and bolts snugged up, the bike started exuding confident handling manners and has become a real joy to ride.
So now I am down to chasing the small stuff.
I find the bike to be a bit on the heavy side compared to my old 02 KTM 520 EXC, but the KTM is a stripped down woods only bike.
The Husky has great brakes, awesome, really. And the suspension is excellent.
I am running Kenda 270's at 20 or 21 PSI. The whole combination makes for a fantastic dual sport bike which is capable of going a couple hundred miles in a day and also capable of running all but the gnarliest of trails. Even then, it is capable, just a bit of work.
The bike has 10K miles on it. The last 2K done by me.