• 4 Stroke Husqvarna Motorcycles Made In Italy - About 1989 to 2014
    TE = 4st Enduro & TC = 4st Cross

  • 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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

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    Thanks for your patience and support!

Spring replacement on an '11 TE 250

Sparked

Husqvarna
AA Class
I just bought a new te250, and since I'm a bit heavier than the average rider (alright, a lot heavier) I replaced the springs. I'm new to Huskies, but not to suspension. It turned out to be a fairly easy job. Here's how I did it.

To start with, I ordered springs from Racetech.com. They have an online calculator that tells you the spring rates you should go with. I ordered a set of .50 springs for the forks, a 6.0 spring for the rear, and an adapter collar for the rear spring. The collar is necessary because the Racetech shock spring is not the same diameter as the stock spring.

The parts arrived and I got started.
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First off I removed the front wheel so I could work on one fork leg at a time. Next I moved the handlebar out of the way of the top of the forks.

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Then unscrew the top cap from the fork tube. Once it is unscrewed, the fork lower can be lifted up. Lift it and tie it up as high as it will go.

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Unscrew the fork cap from the damper rod. The nut on the rod is 19mm.
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Remove the top spring collar and the spring. Hook something around the damper rod so it doesn't drop down into the forks. The bungee that I used isn't under any tension.

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I like to mark my springs. They have a number painted on them but it often rubs off.
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Measure the oil level, just because I'm there.
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Installation is the reverse of removal. Pretty much. The Racetech springs are 5mm shorter than the stock springs, but included spacers. The spacers are meant to go down in the bowels of the forks, so I didn't install them. The springs aren't loose in the forks, so I'll just slide the forks in the tubes to tune it. Spacers are easy to add to the top later if necessary.

The one gotcha is screwing the fork caps back on to the damper rods. The 19mm nut is just a jam nut- it's not fixed to the damper rod so you have to make sure to thread the damper rod all the way (lightly) into the fork cap before tightening the jam nut.

On to the shock. The hardest part of this is removing and reinstalling the shock. The first time I adjusted the preload I couldn't get a hook wrench in to move the rings, and so lifted the subframe to get at it, which required removing the gas tank. Not again. It turns out the shock can be removed out the bottom of the bike.

Although I didn't do this, I highly recommend removing the rear wheel and suspending the swingarm from the tail of the bike with a tiedown.

Remove the bolt connecting the suspension linkage to the swingarm.
Rotate the linkage to gain access to the lower shock bolt and remove it too, letting the linkage hang free.
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Remove the top shock bolt. This is easiest if you remove the left side panel, and use a two 14mm sockets on extensions, one from each side.
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To get the shock out, rotate it so the reservoir is to the left side of the bike and it will fit down through the swingarm.
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In order to make it fit you have to lift the swingarm while lowering the shock.

I measured the preload on the old spring in order to be able to figure out about how much preload
to put on the new spring. Not necessary, but time saving.
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Back off the two shock rings all the way. It's much easier if you've cleaned and oiled the shock body first.
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Then remove the collar from the other end of the shock. The bottoming bumper required a bit of a push to get it down out of the way.
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Wash out all the gunk that accumulates down there.

These are spring collars that came from Racetech.

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They're not quite the same size. The small one, which wasn't needed, was included in the box with the spring. The larger one I ordered separately (the part is shown when you look up the springs on the website).

The collar is a press fit into the spring.

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I used the clamp to hold everything in position while using the channel locks to force the collar into the spring. The spring is only compressed a fraction of an inch. Any more and there's a risk of it violently popping out of the clamp.

The Racetech spring was a little longer than the stock spring, but it went on the shock without a compressor or levers. The collar went on the top side of the spring, although I don't suppose it matters. It did make the spring label right side up, though.

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I had guessed that I should give the new spring half the preload of the old one. Once I got it back together and measured the sag, it turned out to be not quite enough. One turn tighter with the 8oz universal tool and a soft drift made it just right.

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I'll need some riding to get it just right, but it already feels way better. It's hard to believe that stiffer springs can make a bike feel plusher, but they do.
 
Is there some reason you didn't clean your bike before working on it?

OK, maybe it was freezing cold...

Honestly I might have proceeded as you did but I hang out a bit at Uptite and he washes bikes before he fixes them.

Good pictures and explanations.
 
I did clean it- quickly. After my last ride I hosed off a couple of gallons of mud and then checked for loose dirt above the fork caps.
 
Nice work :thumbsup:. When I pulled my shock off to send to Les, I had to lift the subframe a bit and move the airbox to get the shock out. Nice to see that it can be done without that step, I'm not sure why I had to now...
 
Nice work :thumbsup:. When I pulled my shock off to send to Les, I had to lift the subframe a bit and move the airbox to get the shock out. Nice to see that it can be done without that step, I'm not sure why I had to now...

I didn't think it could be done until that I read that it could. It is tricky; like one of those bent-nail puzzles. I wound up pushing a lot on the airbox too.
 
Is there some reason you didn't clean your bike before working on it?

OK, maybe it was freezing cold...

Honestly I might have proceeded as you did but I hang out a bit at Uptite and he washes bikes before he fixes them.

Good pictures and explanations.

He did'nt wash mine...
 
It's hard to believe that stiffer springs can make a bike feel plusher said:
I certainly agree here. I have replaced the rear springs on both my 11 TE310 and 09 WR250 and can't believe how much better they feel.
 
Those are exactly like older Yamaha YZ forks.

What were the stock fork spring wt? 4.4kg?

I removed the linkage bolt from the swingarm and the linkage won't disconnect.

What am I doing wrong?
 
Those are exactly like older Yamaha YZ forks.

What were the stock fork spring wt? 4.4kg?

I removed the linkage bolt from the swingarm and the linkage won't disconnect.

What am I doing wrong?

I think .45 kg/mm is stock.

I was able to twist the triangular link part to get to the lower shock bolt. Once that was free, it dropped like in the picture. Lifting the swingarm may help. If the swingarm isn't supported it may be resting on the linkage.
 
Awesome write up. I going to do the same on my 2012 when I pick it up. Hope it's not much different being a "low" model and all.
 
Curious, whats your weight geared up?
I'm 220lb geared up and I'm thinking I've got to re spring.
Right now I'm trying to figure out the sag.
 
About 250. Set the sag and it will tell you how close you are. I had nearly zero static sag with the correct loaded sag.
 
About 250. Set the sag and it will tell you how close you are. I had nearly zero static sag with the correct loaded sag.​

Yes the stock rear springs are pretty soft on the TE's.

I have a 2011 TE310. I weigh ~200 fully geared.

I had ~1/4" static sag (incorrect) vs. correct rider sag with the stock spring..

Replaced the stock 5.2 with a 5.8. That's a pretty big jump. Rider vs. static sag now spot on.
 
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