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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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!
I like the race head. I use mine all over...desert, mtn singletrack, rocky washes that just make you laugh because you cant even believe there is a way over and through the jumbled mess in front of you. I like the extra power in the tight stuff as it helps me get the front wheel up. Note i also have the pwk carb and pro circuit exhaust and now run a mix of pump premium and race gas as the increased compression led to some pinging. Not sure if it will do that without the extras, but just an fyi. If you like a bit more oomph right off the bat then you will like it.
For me, the race head no question. That boost the low end and help to smooth the transition from low to mid. I now make 53.6 whp and 35.6 wtq with my 300 and the motor is very easy to ride but incredibly strong and fast from very low to overrev... I love the 300 motor and even if his a little outdated ... i think its the best enduro bike engine. Habitualy i change my bike every year but i have this 300 since 2010 and i have no plan to change it. I will wait to see the next Husky 2 stroke
What other mods are you running? And i agree...i love this bike! I have had lots and its my favorite for sure
I have a 250, I had the stock head machined to the same spec as the race head and saved myself about $80. For me no question I like the higher compression. More torque, easier to ride. Even with the race head the compression is still much lower than my KX had standard. I'm not really sure why Husky specs such low comression stock.
The 250 does not have a lot of compression. It only has around 170psi (8.4:1) listed in manual. I sent the head to an engine builder who shaved the head and reworked the combustion chamber as well. It now reads around 190psi.
Here are the before and after photos. Yes, it is possible to shave the head. The O rings fit grooves in the cylinder, not the head. Any decent shop that builds two strokes can do this. Had the same done to my KX, also O ring head.
Totally disagree Johnny - race head is the best value for money mod you can make to a 300, especially in the tight woods gnarly sections. It becomes impossible to stall and has bags more low end/mid range torque especially with the PWK. Top end doesn't feel compromised but certainly doesn't feel much different to standard. It would be nice to see a comparative std versus race head torque graph if anyone has one.Depends on how you use your bike. In don't like it for tight woodsriding when i get tired. The bike gets too explosive for me, especially if you use the Keihin PWK carb that also increases the bottom end power. I like the standard head better in the woods combined with a quite lean and smooth jetting on my PWK 38 AS:=). When i was iceracing my 300 then it was another story, but i have another bike for that now:=).
Johnny
interesting thread gents. excuse my ignorance windsurf but what are these powernow things? ive heard the name or seen it somewhere before but what are they and what do they do? hi comp head sounds like a goer! any reduction in reliability with the higher comp? do you just bolt em (straight swap for stock)on and ride or have to measure squish etc?Totally disagree Johnny - race head is the best value for money mod you can make to a 300, especially in the tight woods gnarly sections. It becomes impossible to stall and has bags more low end/mid range torque especially with the PWK. Top end doesn't feel compromised but certainly doesn't feel much different to standard. It would be nice to see a comparative std versus race head torque graph if anyone has one.
I paid less for the head than that bloody overpriced 'powernow' thing!
I bought mine form Husky Sport in the UK, only because it was half the price of here in Oz. I think it was only about $140.Pardon my ignorance; where can one obtain this high compression oem race head and what is the approximate cost?
interesting thread gents. excuse my ignorance windsurf but what are these powernow things? ive heard the name or seen it somewhere before but what are they and what do they do? hi comp head sounds like a goer! any reduction in reliability with the higher comp? do you just bolt em (straight swap for stock)on and ride or have to measure squish etc?
worth checking squish ya reckon?I bought mine form Husky Sport in the UK, only because it was half the price of here in Oz. I think it was only about $140.
The power now thing is a piece of thing tube with a divider plate accross the middle. The device slides into the back end of your carb behind the slide. the plate is horizontal behind the slide. The idea is that at anything upto half throttle air can only be drawn below the plate smoothing airflow through the carb. More than half throttle air is drawn either side of the plate. (I think there is also a version that fits infront of the slide).
So far as the hi comp head goes it's a 15 min job - remove your exisisting head, probably worth buying two new water inlet fittings as they are difficult to remove from your old head and easy to damage. Fit new head - go and have fun! I dont see any reduction in reliability so far and have done 1500 miles on it.