• Hi everyone,

    As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.

    When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.

    Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

    Unfortunately, the new software version doesn’t support importing the old site’s styles, so for now, you’ll see the XenForo default style. This may change over time.

    Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.

    Thanks for your patience and support!

  • 2 Stroke Husqvarna Motorcycles Made In Austria - About 2014 & Newer
    TE = 2st Enduro & TC = 2st Cross

TE/TC 14 TE300 made some changes to test carburation

robertaccio

Husqvarna
Pro Class
added thunder products torque wing thingy to my carb, cut a FMF snap to about 2/3 s size and installed into my airboot- stock it was for a KTM300XCFW and did not fit.
3 holes in side cover, JD jetting standard set up for 3k-6k 72deg 38P BlU2 162 main 1.5 AS, FMF Gnarley with OEM silencer and EE S/A end cap. The R Lafferty needle was working well but man that thing was soooo much thinner than any of my 300 needles that why it works so well with the 35P, anyway I wanted to play, I may still drop this needle to the #1 slot or adjust with the red needle. still running pump premium with 40:1 maxima super m, also I installed an iridium plug BR7EIX I think is the number

Super tractor mode, we did a test loop that is full on ugly, a real 2%er trail, thing just low rpmd like a 450 4 stroka.

I also raised my float height maybe 1mm/2mm from my setting at max spec low, she was stalling on steep downhills.
Wed is Vets day we have a track get together I will do pipe swaps and silencer swaps.
 
just being a little careful with the snap....it expands the intake boot a little and clearance to the shock is tight. after one ride OK but I want to keep an eye on it so we don't get a chafe to the boot.
 
I wonder what the advantage of the snap is. Saw them on the FMF site. So it adds turbulence or creates a vortex into the carb inlet?
 
I wonder what the advantage of the snap is. Saw them on the FMF site. So it adds turbulence or creates a vortex into the carb inlet?

straightens the airflow seeks to eliminate turbulence . the reason I jumped on it was due to my previous experience with the powernow devices on my 450s I used the 2 powernows- at both sides of the carburetor. it made tremendous difference in lower rpm smooth torque power, instantly noticable
 
I don't know much about these inserts? Or the fact that they could divide and or restrict airflow, by simple mathematical volume. But the velocity of airflow would increase below the divider on these devices prior to the air passing the opening slide and being in transit, pulling fuel. Turbulence would be redirected and therefore reduced. Causing a more responsive and crisper snap to the engine.

All carbs and I would say, especially 2 stroke carburetors draw 90 percent of their mass air flow from at the rim of the carburetors venturi. At the rear flange area. Since the slide is closed alot of the time. The bigger the notch on the slide or cut away, the leaner the mixture. The smaller the notch on the slide, the richer the mixture, as it resists the taking on of incoming air and putting it in transit by means of the venturi effect. That's why they have a tapered air horn inlet boot on the air box inlet to begin with. So It has an enormous area of pre-filtered air to draw upon. It still draws most of the air for the engine at the carburetors rim, regardless. That's where there is the most velocity.

The days of the old "Uni Sock filters" were a joke on our old 2 strokes back in the day (1970s). As it made the engine work harder and actually hindered performance. It caused the engine to suck air through the filter at the Venturi's flange and that air is not readily available or pre-filtered to draw upon. It's on the outside of the filters foam where it's trying to suck the hardest right near the edge. If an old sock filter was used the best thing you could do was at least space it back on a straight, or even better a tapered sleeve at least the carbs outside diameter or larger than the diameter of the carbs flange. So the supply of air was there, available and already Pre-filtered.
 
Should of got a 200. Hehe
I'm reading of many many ktm 300 riders complaining about the new 300s and how they are down on power especially the husky. They seem to have much less compression and with the husky we have the air restrictions to address. They claim the 09, 10 versions were much stronger stock. I'm sure the new ones can be made stronger but it takes some work.
 
TE= Two Stroke Enduro = last all day in the saddle never get tired, most of us (100% me) will turn faster special test time on "soft" power delivery bike, all my efforts are to maximize the power for me, maximize does not mean maximize the HP, because with this bike thats really not to hard to do. Its a 3 stroke and thats what and how I like it.
 
Should of got a 200. Hehe
I'm reading of many many ktm 300 riders complaining about the new 300s and how they are down on power especially the husky. They seem to have much less compression and with the husky we have the air restrictions to address. They claim the 09, 10 versions were much stronger stock. I'm sure the new ones can be made stronger but it takes some work.
As 2T gets smaller... the more 2T like it is.... Your 2T education is about to begin!:busted:
 
Should of got a 200. Hehe
I'm reading of many many ktm 300 riders complaining about the new 300s and how they are down on power especially the husky. They seem to have much less compression and with the husky we have the air restrictions to address. They claim the 09, 10 versions were much stronger stock. I'm sure the new ones can be made stronger but it takes some work.
Compression is an easy fix. Bolt on a race head or have your squish band modified/re-machined
 
40:1 huh? Is that a personal choice vs the 60:1 stated in the manual? Or is it a higher altitude compensation?
 
we actually had more than orange yesterday----3 Huskys and 2 Hondas- 2x TE300, 1x FE350, 1x CR250, 1x CRF450 and a bunch of KTMs. My other 3 hundo bros (Andy and Nate) were on the gassssss big time yesterday. I was the slow guy. we will need to do special test comparos next week (hahaha) we had a sort of large group yesterday, but with little or no dust it was fun.
 
Should of got a 200. Hehe
I'm reading of many many ktm 300 riders complaining about the new 300s and how they are down on power especially the husky. They seem to have much less compression and with the husky we have the air restrictions to address. They claim the 09, 10 versions were much stronger stock. I'm sure the new ones can be made stronger but it takes some work.

I don't know Reveille, mine is pretty powerful! And it's stock! But I'm trying to do more enduro (woods, trail riding etc). If I was taking it out on a MX track, I'm going first off have to change the suspension to get the most out of how fast I can go. Right now I want to detune it somewhat so as to not just dig ditches if that makes any sense. :thumbsup:
 
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