• 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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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!

Giant Loop MoJavi Review

danbartol

Husqvarna
AA Class
I decided to give the Giant Loop MoJavi a try for my Husky TE-510.

The bag is perfect for small enduro bikes that do not have a subframe or a rear rack.

The Husky is particularly hard to fit because it virtually has no side numberplates.

P1020446.jpg


Looks I might not need a rack at all. The Mojavi is well built and fits the bike perfectly. It hold just enough for a day ride (tools, tubes, a bit of extra fuel and the light weight fleece for the morning chill).

Tools on top:
P1020465.jpg


Fuel (2.1 liter Nalgene) on the right away from the exhaust:
P1020467.jpg


P1020468.jpg


Tubes and the rest can go on the left side.


P1020447.jpg



P1020448.jpg



P1020450.jpg


P1020451.jpg


While standing or sitting on the bike you don't even notice it's there. It even gives you plenty of room to slide backward to hop over logs or steep down hills.

I opted to notch the rear fender to give the bag a tighter hold.
P1020461.jpg


P1020463.jpg



Construction seems really solid.

P1020458.jpg


I'm gonna load it up and give it a test run mid week on an enduro circuit.

I'll report back after the real test run.
 
Cool! Thanks for the review and photos, danbartol :thumbsup:

I like the ideas that the Giant Loop guys come up with, and I like the fact that they're sewn up here in the good ol' USA. I'm thinking about getting one of these for my guy so he can get some weight out of his backpack.

I'm looking forward to a ride report :)



WoodsChick
 
I rode with mine today, it is A+ 100% perfect!!! Held all my tools, and totally not able to tell it was there.

I had a small problem with my Coyote Bag (my Fault) All I can say is that the Owner of GL Dave Wachs is onr hlluva guy!:thumbsup:
 
xymotic;86407 said:
I rode with mine today, it is A+ 100% perfect!!! Held all my tools, and totally not able to tell it was there.

I had a small problem with my Coyote Bag (my Fault) All I can say is that the Owner of GL Dave Wachs is onr hlluva guy!:thumbsup:

Yep, Wachs is a pretty cool dude :)

So, you had the Coyote and now you have the MoJavi?
I kinda had my eye on the Coyote to replace my doggie bags on the 610. What did you think of it and what was the problem? I have the original GL bag, but would really like something waterproof like the Coyote.



WoodsChick
 
WoodsChick;86474 said:
Yep, Wachs is a pretty cool dude :)

So, you had the Coyote and now you have the MoJavi?
I kinda had my eye on the Coyote to replace my doggie bags on the 610. What did you think of it and what was the problem? I have the original GL bag, but would really like something waterproof like the Coyote.



WoodsChick


I plan on getting another Coyote as well when I scrounge up some $$.

The "problem" is that it does not like being underpacked/empty. I had just tools in it, and it flopped around. Eventually the buckle broke and the whole thing got into the tire. (I think I'm the ONLY person to EVER break a buckle. It was also the only time I've really had headphones in in the dirt, I was blasting through smooth fun whoops listening to Nine Inch Nails so I didn't hear it grinding. Ironically, I was in Mojave

The Mo'Javi can be left on the bike even if totally empty. They really are for two different uses, long camping trips to Nevada like you do the Coyote is perfect. Day rides doing jumps and such with buds the Mo'Javi is great. I just did a lot less long distance Adventure type stuff than I like to admit.

The 610 makes mounting either one challenging to say the least. You can tell the design is good and fits 99% of bikes better...
 
Just got my Mojavi in the mail. Smaller than i thought which is good as it looked to big in pix. Should be perfect for day trips. Will test tonight or this weekend. :thumbsup: The construction is awesome.

mojave-saddlebag-front_large.jpg
 
That is a very useful looking bit of kit. Just right for winter rides when gear tends to come off when you get hot and need to store stuff. I can see it replacing my bum bag and large back pack leaving me to only carry a smaller camel pack.
 
I used my MoJavi last night. Awesome product. Super nice construction, goes on in a snap, very universal. Holds about twice as much as a large camelback, don't even know it is there when riding. Love it. So nice to not have that weight on my back. Ran it on my DS bike. Great stuff :thumbsup:
 
Motosportz;90731 said:
I used my MoJavi last night. Awesome product. Super nice construction, goes on in a snap, very universal. Holds about twice as much as a large camelback, don't even know it is there when riding. Love it. So nice to not ahve that weight on my back. Ran it on my DS bike. Great stuff :thumbsup:

Crap :(

I think you just cost me a lot of money...




WoodsChick
 
WoodsChick;90734 said:
Crap :(

I think you just cost me a lot of money...




WoodsChick


Yeah, the bad think is the Mo'Javi AND the coyote are both really good, (and expensive) and you "need" them for different types of riding that you do.
 
xymotic;90736 said:
Yeah, the bad think is the Mo'Javi AND the coyote are both really good, (and expensive) and you "need" them for different types of riding that you do.

I have the Coyote version as well, have had it for a while but have not used it as i have not done an overnighter nor need the size. Plan to try it out this summer. This MoJavi is too cool though for day trips. :thumbsup:
 
I really like this bag. So cool to get all that crap off your back and have room for cloths you shed etc.

Crappy night pix. BTW you should see the crap Jake can do on the Transalp. Crazy :eek:

841106555_8LcgA-L.jpg


841108454_FLLap-L.jpg
 
jmetteer;91118 said:
The Transalp practically rides it's self...

Exactly, thats why it is amazing you can get it to do what YOU want. That climb out of the trail onto the road was cool. :thumbsup:
 
Some better pix. I am loving this product :thumbsup: Hold a lot of stuff and disappears on the bike. Off road worthy for sure. Will not move / great design.

848460565_raUYK-L.jpg


848460658_9jzSb-L.jpg


848461128_9VPCX-L.jpg


848460685_8GusL-L.jpg
 
Back
Top