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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

Husky 800 paralell twin

T Stretch;128107 said:
I might have pulled the plug too early. I just traded in my TE630 for the BMW F800GS three weeks ago.

Think you definitely got things back to front!

BMW has never been that successful when introducing new, innovative designs. They´ve always been best (and successful) with an evolutionary approach. (a) Beemer customers tend to be conservative in the extreme and (b) BMW´s market forecasts (eg the C1) have consistently flopped.
Mating BMW´s technical expertise with Husky´s offroad experience and capturing the `adventure´ market via the Husky brand is a logical strategy to the advantage of both brands.
 
T Stretch;128107 said:
I might have pulled the plug too early. I just traded in my TE630 for the BMW F800GS three weeks ago.

Wow...that was fast! I'd like to hear a little more about this, please.
Was the TE630 unsatisfactory in any way? Or was it just not the kind of bike to suit your needs? Do tell!



WoodsChick
 
WoodsChick;128157 said:
Wow...that was fast! I'd like to hear a little more about this, please.
Was the TE630 unsatisfactory in any way? Or was it just not the kind of bike to suit your needs? Do tell!



WoodsChick


:doh: Nevermind. I just saw your post in the 610/630 forum. Sounds like maybe it was too small for the street and too big for the dirt? Makes sense. That's why I have a streetbike and regular dirtbikes, too :) The 610 fills a big gap between the two quite nicely for me.




WoodsChick
 
I love my F800GS. It's not perfect and the suspension could use an upgrade if your interests are more hard core, but it's got nice power and is extremely versatile. It's a great adventure bike.
 
No I don't have one just went to the dealer who emails me when the big rig full of test bikes shows up. After we got back to the parking lot I tried to see what would happen if I tried to let the clutch out in first gear without touching the throtle and it instantly died. I have a 1993 model fuel injected motorcycle and it is the most like a tractor with a governor of any bike I have experienced. I suppose I could start a thread in the fuel injection section but how do the Husqvarna fuel injected bikes behave in this respect? I guess it depends on where your adventure takes you.

Fran
 
fran...k.;128232 said:
No I don't have one just went to the dealer who emails me when the big rig full of test bikes shows up. After we got back to the parking lot I tried to see what would happen if I tried to let the clutch out in first gear without touching the throtle and it instantly died. I have a 1993 model fuel injected motorcycle and it is the most like a tractor with a governor of any bike I have experienced. I suppose I could start a thread in the fuel injection section but how do the Husqvarna fuel injected bikes behave in this respect? I guess it depends on where your adventure takes you.

Fran

Sounds like you could probably use a little practice in the clutching department. I can do a first gear start at idle no problem without modulating throttle, however it's not optimal or like my Cummins Diesel that will bulldoze a house down with self correcting idle, but I don't want it that way on a bike anyhow.
 
fran...k.;128232 said:
After we got back to the parking lot I tried to see what would happen if I tried to let the clutch out in first gear without touching the throtle and it instantly died.

Most bikes would die in that situation. I don't understand the point of it. Everyone i know adds a little throttle when taking off. How does this make husky adding an adventure bike with a BMW 800 motor a bad thing. I'm missing something here.
 
You need 3 bikes I recon, small bore either a wr 125/ 250 or TE 310 to be a ST pest. A 630 for genuine 50/50 stuff and a GS 800 or KTM 990 for Adventure riding (bring on the Husky 800 then we can stay "in-house for the lot).
 
ghte;128338 said:
You need 3 bikes I recon, small bore either a wr 125/ 250 or TE 310 to be a ST pest. A 630 for genuine 50/50 stuff and a GS 800 or KTM 990 for Adventure riding (bring on the Husky 800 then we can stay "in-house for the lot).

Sweet, I've already got a TE610 and an F800GS. And I gotta admit, I'm eyein a 310. I just gotta figure out how to wrangle the cash...
 
NMB you are my kind of fella. get the new 310 if its only 1% better than the 2010 machine it will be a cracker.
 
ghte;128495 said:
MNB you are my kind of fella. get the new 310 if its only 1% better than the 2010 machine it will be a cracker.
(fixed the letter swap on my nickname)


What are the 2010 model weaknesses? A local dealer has one for a nice discount.

I see the 2011 model has an improved frame among other things...


They're also blowing out a 2010 Husaberg 390 FE that sounds pretty tempting...

I was checking out Beta's website. You can custom order your bike down to the proper springs for your weight. No extra charge (unless you add custom bling in your build to ordering). Sounds pretty nice.

So many bikes... so little money...
 
ghte;128495 said:
NMB you are my kind of fella. get the new 310 if its only 1% better than the 2010 machine it will be a cracker.

Yep, that's what Eric said after riding a 2010 at the PNW ride in Oregon!

Can't wait for my buiddy to get his. He should have it by Thanksgiving, I hope!




WoodsChick
 
Motosportz;128237 said:
Most bikes would die in that situation. I don't understand the point of it. Everyone i know adds a little throttle when taking off. How does this make husky adding an adventure bike with a BMW 800 motor a bad thing. I'm missing something here.

I definately am not saying it is a bad thing. I have done what is called adventure with the old earles fork r-50 and r-60 both with the stock and the wide ratio sidcar gearbox long before the adventure genre was named. It comes to how slow you can go and when you kind of get stuck or get to a point you know you will get stuck and have to turn around. If you don't use the throttle chances are the rear wheel won't spin. Wll that was the kind of adventures I had. Obviously you don't get to test out the slow aspect on the highway with a lead and a chace rider form the importer/distributor. That was the best test I could devise given the situation. I have tried to think if I have had anything (automotive, pick up, van) fuel injected and standard but not since a vw squareback and that did good no throttle. A diesel isn't really a fair comparison as there isn't a butterfly valve, slide, etc, in the supply air.
 
I have not noticed any wekness on the 310. Coming from a 450 I did need to adjust my riding style a wee bit. However I am really much less tired after a long day and feel more confidant in ths steep st stuff. The 310 is really a proven design so no flaws. It is a tallish bike and a smidge on the heavy side. However, I am not aware of the bikes dimensions when on the move. I have not regretted the change one iota. The Berg is a good bike. I have ridden the 390 on several occasions. The mass centralisation is not really noticable at that engine size (a big difference of the 570). Personally the KTM 400 is a better feeling bike imho, apart from reliability issues at present. I felt the Berg was nose down in posture to ride yet a bite skatey. This was partially corrected by droping the forks a tad, however it exacerbated the nose down feel. Probably get use to it.
The Beta is an interesting propositon esp. with a 350. People seem very happy with them. Only issue is dealer network and support etc. For mine it Husky all the way.
 
Ok, enough chitchat about the 310 and back to the matter at hand :D

After washing my mouth from the horrendous taste the ECIMA, Husqvarna “design exercise” had left and having few nightmares about that abomination, I would like to go back to this exiting new model

I don’t know a lot about the BMW 800GS, but yesterday I’ve stumbled upon this little riot of a clip
[YOUTUBE]btRvVLA0KzM[/YOUTUBE]

So let’s get it straight; you’re saying Husky is going to get this 800GS platform, massage it all up, make sexy time to it and come up with a brut ?
And it’ll look more like this :notworthy:
Husqvarna_Supermotard_motore_bicilindrico_parallelo_800_cc_BMW_85_CV_jpg_700.jpg

And nothing....absolutely NOTHING like that horrible, dreadfully ridiculous ECIMA “design exercise” ?






All I can say is
Oh Lord, I want it !!!

:thumbsup::thumbsup:
 
Back
Top