Cosmokenney
Husqvarna
Pro Class
I took the day off yesterday since there was a break in the hot weather. To date, all my rides on the TX300 have pretty much been dial-in rides. I've been anal with this bike in terms of changing one thing and going for a ride to test that one thing. And it paid off.
Yesterday I went up to one or our more challenging local single-track OHV areas. And I was really able to put the bike through its paces -- or at least my version of that. I didn't do any tweaking. Just enjoyed the new bike.
We have a variety of terrain in this area. From smooth twisty single track to rocky butt puckering climbs. And I have to say that the combination of an already smooth power curve, as far as two stokes go, combined with the lectron makes this bike so versatile in any terrain.
The lectron has eliminated any hint of a hit, and the bike just pulls from 0.1 rpm through to screaming fast in a nice linear way. It's actually more linear than any 4 stroke I've ridden.
With the suspension dialed in I can just charge though the trails that are layered with fist sized rocks, and its like they aren't even there. On faster fire roads and trails, I've noticed that this bike really likes you to weight the front end for traction in turns. I'm going to have to figure out if this is a setup issue or just an attribute of the bike. It seems to under-steer without being in full on MX turn position with inside leg extended for counter-balance. I'd love to hear from other TX owners on this subject.
In the trials section like rocky climbs with multiple rock step ups this bike handle it like I imagine a trials bike would (never ridden one). But it is so light and balanced and the front tire comes up with just a flick of the wrist that I feel super confident hopping up the steps and tackling climbs like that.
The other thing is with the clutch preload spring in the #1 position I have a really nice 1 finger clutch with a wider engagement zone. That makes it real nice in the technical sections. Combine that with a very modulateable throttle and I feel like Graham Jarvis.
Seems like the bike gets pretty good gas mileage too. I think there are at least 55 if not 60 miles of technical single track in that (smallish) tank. Anyone tested this?
Yesterday I went up to one or our more challenging local single-track OHV areas. And I was really able to put the bike through its paces -- or at least my version of that. I didn't do any tweaking. Just enjoyed the new bike.
We have a variety of terrain in this area. From smooth twisty single track to rocky butt puckering climbs. And I have to say that the combination of an already smooth power curve, as far as two stokes go, combined with the lectron makes this bike so versatile in any terrain.
The lectron has eliminated any hint of a hit, and the bike just pulls from 0.1 rpm through to screaming fast in a nice linear way. It's actually more linear than any 4 stroke I've ridden.
With the suspension dialed in I can just charge though the trails that are layered with fist sized rocks, and its like they aren't even there. On faster fire roads and trails, I've noticed that this bike really likes you to weight the front end for traction in turns. I'm going to have to figure out if this is a setup issue or just an attribute of the bike. It seems to under-steer without being in full on MX turn position with inside leg extended for counter-balance. I'd love to hear from other TX owners on this subject.
In the trials section like rocky climbs with multiple rock step ups this bike handle it like I imagine a trials bike would (never ridden one). But it is so light and balanced and the front tire comes up with just a flick of the wrist that I feel super confident hopping up the steps and tackling climbs like that.
The other thing is with the clutch preload spring in the #1 position I have a really nice 1 finger clutch with a wider engagement zone. That makes it real nice in the technical sections. Combine that with a very modulateable throttle and I feel like Graham Jarvis.
Seems like the bike gets pretty good gas mileage too. I think there are at least 55 if not 60 miles of technical single track in that (smallish) tank. Anyone tested this?