• 2 Stroke Husqvarna Motorcycles Made In Italy - About 1989 to 2014
    WR = 2st Enduro & CR = 2st 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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

    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!

All 2st YZ/CR Fork Swap

Could be, but I'd still be dissatisfied with how it's operating compared to the SSS.

I'll take pictures when I tear them down :)
 
I have been told the husky forks are the old design yamaha internals as well. I too am under the assumption that the SSS forks are a step up evolution wise. I don't know any of this first hand but have been told by suspension tuners this is the case.
 
Could be, but I'd still be dissatisfied with how it's operating compared to the SSS.

I'll take pictures when I tear them down :)

You don't have to take pictures for me, I've had all these forks apart. All I was trying to do was explain to you that changing the forks for the new Yamaha versions is a waste of time and money. There are no position sensitive parts in your fork like a 2005 Yamaha. The internal parts are just the same as a 2007 Yamaha fork. Just change the valving in your CR fork.
 
I think you can have dual chamber Ohlins internals put in your forks. If I had Kayaba instead of 50mm Zokes that's the way I'd go.
 
You don't have to take pictures for me, I've had all these forks apart. All I was trying to do was explain to you that changing the forks for the new Yamaha versions is a waste of time and money. There are no position sensitive parts in your fork like a 2005 Yamaha. The internal parts are just the same as a 2007 Yamaha fork. Just change the valving in your CR fork.

I knew you did but I didn't take the bait.

The whole purpose of all of this is to change the valving.

Basically what I'm doing if I buy SSS forks and install the internals in my fork is changing the valving. With the benefit of being able to resell the other forks. I'll probably break even or spend $100 at most. As opposed to $500 for a revalve at a shop.
 
I have been told the husky forks are the old design yamaha internals as well. I too am under the assumption that the SSS forks are a step up evolution wise. I don't know any of this first hand but have been told by suspension tuners this is the case.

I was under the same impression. The SSS stands for the speed sensitive system and it evolved into what it currently is about 2009 and the next evolution was supposedly the 2011 era. They are good forks and one of the many reasons my "next bike" purchase will be a fuel injected yz250f

That said I don't know if I would go jacking around with any major geometry changes without having a place to go and feel things out and experiment with how it feels TO YOU. I've spent a pretty major amount of time dicking around with the forks on my current bike. Me, before thinking about changing the whole front end out I figured I'd learn about how to pull them all apart and service them myself, bleed them properly, figure out what fork oil weight I'd like to try, spring preload, etc.


That new yamaha and my WB144 complete all that I could ever want in the "dirt bike land" portion of my brain at the moment...
 
All this talk about the difference or not between theses forks is driving me crazy. I have a 12 cr 150 and think that the suspension, front and back is awesome. I have let a couple of other guys let my bike and they love it too. I hope u find what you need, but I am very satisfied with whatever forks I have!
 
All this talk about the difference or not between theses forks is driving me crazy. I have a 12 cr 150 and think that the suspension, front and back is awesome. I have let a couple of other guys let my bike and they love it too. I hope u find what you need, but I am very satisfied with whatever forks I have!
That's just it, suspension is personal preference. I wish a factory suspension would work for me but they never make them for a 6'6" 215 lb guy. Actuall they don't make much of anything that works for me right off the shelf. You're one of the lucky ones.
 
Well, I can tell you this, the Yamaha fork is about an inch longer than the Husky, the axle holes are bigger, the brake caliper mount won't fit your Brembo and you'll have to use Yamaha fork guards.

The 2007-11 Yamaha use the same base valve assembles and mid valve pistons that are in your fork, as are a majority of the parts of the inner chamber. This is where all of the important stuff is.

If you are savvy enough to handle a fork swap then you should be able to handle a RACE-TECH GOLD VALVE install. That would be the most sensible way to go.
 
Basically what I'm doing if I buy SSS forks and install the internals in my fork is changing the valving. With the benefit of being able to resell the other forks. I'll probably break even or spend $100 at most. As opposed to $500 for a revalve at a shop.

If you just want to change the valving, why not just change the valving in your forks? Shims are less than 1 dollar each, and it should be easy to find stock valving specs from a 2006+ YZ.

Swapping the entire forks just to get different valving is like buying an entirely new carb for the pilot and main jet.
 
All of that is true if the internals are the same. That's what the discussion has been about to this point.

I'm going to open up the forks and take a look soon, hopefully tonight. If they're the same as SSS, I may just do that.
 
just a side note and not to cause any excitement
makers order parts to fit what they believe to be the market their buyers fit
more specifically Yamaha orders their forks tuned to what they feel their riders want and Husky the same
after buying your bike you probably changed a few things to fit your style, this should be considered the same
 
just a side note and not to cause any excitement
makers order parts to fit what they believe to be the market their buyers fit
more specifically Yamaha orders their forks tuned to what they feel their riders want and Husky the same
after buying your bike you probably changed a few things to fit your style, this should be considered the same

That's true. I am going to open up the husky fork and see what I find.

In a way, I hope that some of you guys are right and that the internals are identical to the SSS, because it makes my life easier. But if not, then we are back to square 1.
 
After much research - I decided that I'm going to just revalve the Husky on my own. Either using Race Tech, or getting familiar with Restackor and going that route.

One reason why I was afraid of reshimming on my own was because I'd be completely guessing and asking others for what they've done, etc. With Restackor, I love that I won't be 'shooting in the dark' since Restackor helps you make an educated guess.

Thanks for the help guys, and thanks for helping me talk my way through it :thumbsup:
 
After much research - I decided that I'm going to just revalve the Husky on my own. Either using Race Tech, or getting familiar with Restackor and going that route.

One reason why I was afraid of reshimming on my own was because I'd be completely guessing and asking others for what they've done, etc. With Restackor, I love that I won't be 'shooting in the dark' since Restackor helps you make an educated guess.

Thanks for the help guys, and thanks for helping me talk my way through it :thumbsup:

that's why we're here
 
I have serviced my TXC 310 forks which are the same as the 2012 Cr1125 forks and they are the same as the 2006+ Yamaha forks. They are definitely not the same as the 2005 Yamaha forks.
 
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