glangston
Husqvarna
Pro Class
jaro51;111853 said:Difference being that the KTM you can roll off the dealers floor and hit the dirt and start tweaking the settings to your liking right away. The Husky on the other hand needs to be gone through with a fine tooth comb to re-grease the bearings, adjust the pipe so it doesn't melt the airbox, move the rear brake line so it doesn't rub the engine cases and most importantly tweak and re-tweak the FI settings to get it to run as well as a carb bike or competitor FI bike.
I love my Husky's and I've had a few and see more in my future but I expect to pay less knowing I have to put in a good bit more "PDI" work than I would on a KTM for example.
Most on this forum are pretty loyal to the brand and sometimes have the blinders on to the fact that these are finicky bikes to get working well. Once set-up, they are great, but they aren't a gas and go bike.
I'd never heard that about KTMs. My bike came from a dealer and once broken in went to Mexico and hasn't had an issue that I had to fix except for that slight turn of the brake line. I paid MSRP and about $300 for him to set it up but I'm not complaining.