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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

The TE630 may be the best adventure touring bike made!

bmah

Husqvarna
AA Class
I just returned from a solo trip to Canada along the Trans Labrador Highway on my TE 630. Just over 3100 miles round trip. I had zero issues with the bike. I adjusted the chain once and lubed it every day, other than that it performed flawlessly! I am very impressed with this bike!IMG_0398.jpgIMG_0411.jpg
 
How is the lynx fairing on these bikes? I rode a dr650 with one on it and something about the shape of the bike with that front end made for truly awful buffeting of the helmet.
 
How is the lynx fairing on these bikes? I rode a dr650 with one on it and something about the shape of the bike with that front end made for truly awful buffeting of the helmet.
To be honest, I never adjusted the windshield from where it is in the photos. The bike was very tiring at highway speeds with the stock setup. The Lynx is a huge improvement with the air hitting around the helmet, my helmet is in the airstream but no noticeable buffeting.IMG_0380.jpgIMG_0381.jpg
 
IMG_0711.jpg

Along the road from Baie Comeau to Manic 5 Dam. Very scenic and nice twisties!! Sorry about the Beverly Hillbillies extra fuel storage! It worked and the fuel was needed for the 400+ KMs between Goose Bay and Port Hope Simpson.
 
Sweet setup, bmah. Thanks for sharing. A cross Canada ride is on my bucket list and these pics just make me wanna do it sooner than later. Did it by car already.
Seems your Lynx also has the crooked dashboard mounting holes. Must be for key clearance???
 
Sweet setup, bmah. Thanks for sharing. A cross Canada ride is on my bucket list and these pics just make me wanna do it sooner than later. Did it by car already.
Seems your Lynx also has the crooked dashboard mounting holes. Must be for key clearance???
If you mean the large hole on the bottom right side of the dash, you're correct, it is for the ignition key and frankly, it could be bigger to accomodate gloved fingers.
 
Lots of gravel, some deep, all on hard packed base not a time for daydreaming!IMG_0415.jpgIMG_0737.jpg

Port Hope Simpson in the distance and some of the sketchiest riding of the trip lies ahead.
 
I suppose that I should list how the bike is equipped:

Seat Concepts Seat- excellent product and a night and day difference in comfort over the stock seat

Lynx Fairing- another excellent product and great support from Ian @ Britannia Composites!

Ricochet skid plate- listed to fit the TE610, but fits the TE630 without any modifications

Powerlet outlet- to power my heated clothing, air compressor

Symtec heated grips- easy install, two elements and reasonably priced around $40.00. I ordered mine from California Sport Touring

Husky TE630 handguards from Husky Special parts catalog

Garmin Zumo 550

Giant Loop Moto Fandango Tank bag

Giant Loop Moto Coyote Luggage- great product! You can't even tell that it is on the bike and it does not move at all, nor does it require any heat shielding from the exhaust on the TE630.

Husky Power Up kit

That's it, everything else is totally stock. I set the rear shock sag to 90mm with the bike loaded and with my riding gear on. Zero issues with head-shake or any other undesirable handling traits. I was very impressed with the suspension on this bike, the rougher the road got, the better the ride! Easily the best stock suspension of any bike that I've owned!

If I could have a wish list from Husky to improve this bike, it would be to add compression adjustment on the fork and a larger fuel tank, that's it!
 
IMG_0458.jpg

The stock Karoo at 3,000 miles. I really should have had a tire shipped ahead for this trip. This tire caused me a good bit of anxiety and I finally found a replacement tire in Nova Scotia. The Kenda replacement tire was a street tire, it had tread and I had nothing but blacktop between Sydney, NS and New Hampshire, so, it was a real relief!
 
If you mean the large hole on the bottom right side of the dash, you're correct, it is for the ignition key and frankly, it could be bigger to accomodate gloved fingers.
I meant how it's at an angle. Ian could've drilled the holes a little further left for clearance. The wires aren't long enough to go up so he probably compromised:
crooked.jpg
But yeah, the hole could be bigger as well. This is it now with a 1/4" thick abs dash. Much better access with the computer out of the way:
dash.jpg
 
I meant how it's at an angle. Ian could've drilled the holes a little further left for clearance. The wires aren't long enough to go up so he probably compromised:
View attachment 10761
But yeah, the hole could be bigger as well. This is it now with a 1/4" thick abs dash. Much better access with the computer out of the way:
View attachment 10764
I was limited as to where I could mount the Zumo. I would have liked to mount it in the center of the dash, but the only way to do that would have been to use 1" stand offs and the Zumo would have over lapped the computer. In the end, I used 1/2" offsets and mounted the GPS off to the right side. Ian actually sent me a spare ABS dash with no cutouts to design my own dash, since he recognized how tight the dash would be with the Zumo mount. The compromise with my setup is that the Garmin can only be removed with tools from the mount since the mount release is blocked by the nut holding the dash together on the top right side of the dash. I'm OK with that as it makes it that much harder for someone to steal the Zumo.
 
Nope, I just set the sag. I've been meaning to check the balance of the front wheel, I'll check it when I mount the Mefo Super Explorer on the rear.
 
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