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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

Break down on first ever 610 ride

Rough Rider

Husqvarna
AA Class
I just got my almost new 610 and had break down on my very first short ride, not a good start.

The green light on the instrument panel started flashing and the bike started stuttering. All lights then went out and the bike stopped, and was dead as a door nail.

I was stuck in a precarious location where bikers have been attacked in the past, and was not a happy camper. Luckly my mate has a landcruiser and could reach me before the muggers did.

Long story short, turned out that the positive battery terminal bolt had vibrated out. I suppose it could happen on any bike, but I've never experienced this before. I hope it is not a bad omen.

To make things worse my mate who collected me had told me before I bought the Husky that I was mad. He then pointed out to me that this could never have happened to him on his XR 650 R (unfortunatley he is right there).
 
Rough Rider;118291 said:
I just got my almost new 610 and had break down on my very first short ride, not a good start.

The green light on the instrument panel started flashing and the bike started stuttering. All lights then went out and the bike stopped, and was dead as a door nail.

I was stuck in a precarious location where bikers have been attacked in the past, and was not a happy camper. Luckly my mate has a landcruiser and could reach me before the muggers did.

Long story short, turned out that the positive battery terminal bolt had vibrated out. I suppose it could happen on any bike, but I've never experienced this before. I hope it is not a bad omen.

To make things worse my mate who collected me had told me before I bought the Husky that I was mad. He then pointed out to me that this could never have happened to him on his XR 650 R (unfortunatley he is right there).

I'm sorry you had trouble with your new 610 on your very first ride. Is it brand new or did you buy it used? Either way, it's always a good idea to go over the bike with a fine tooth comb before riding it for the first time. I used to have a Yamaha FZR400 that would sometimes experience a loose battery terminal. Loose bolts do not only happen to Husqvarnas, unfortunately; I wouldn't consider a loose bolt a breakdown or a bad omen, just poor bike preparation.




WoodsChick
 
A loose battery terminal is an exceptionally easy problem to diagnose and correct.

If you’re going to be riding in remote or dangerous areas I recommend you learn the most basic trouble shooting skills.

You could have had your bike rolling in a matter of minutes instead of waiting for a ride.

Good luck and stay safe.
 
Flying Trash Can;118340 said:
A loose battery terminal is an exceptionally easy problem to diagnose and correct.

If you’re going to be riding in remote or dangerous areas I recommend you learn the most basic trouble shooting skills.

You could have had your bike rolling in a matter of minutes instead of waiting for a ride.

Good luck and stay safe.


"Blush" yes you are absolutly right.
 
WoodsChick;118304 said:
I'm sorry you had trouble with your new 610 on your very first ride. Is it brand new or did you buy it used? Either way, it's always a good idea to go over the bike with a fine tooth comb before riding it for the first time. I used to have a Yamaha FZR400 that would sometimes experience a loose battery terminal. Loose bolts do not only happen to Husqvarnas, unfortunately; I wouldn't consider a loose bolt a breakdown or a bad omen, just poor bike preparation.




WoodsChick

It is a second hand bike that is like new, only 2600 kms on the clock. The previous owner was anal and really looked after it well.
 
Yep.

Prep a new to you bike, look it over well and make sure everything is good to go. Then you already understand your bike and how it is put together and you could trouble shoot issues on the trail. Obviously a good tool kit, some zip ties, some JBweld, tire pump and patches should be on you at all times. Those are solid bikes, your buddy is wishing his honda was as cool and he did not have to kick it :D Cam chain is about the only thing to keep an eye on on those.
 
You are fortunate to have a PO do most of the prep work for you. I think a pre-combed Husky with low miles is better than a new one (mine had a careless PO and probably a dozen missing, loose, stuck or stripped fasteners). Once you get yours all squared away, you'll have a bike almost as reliable as a Honda and twice as sexy. ;)
 
Rough Rider;118345 said:
It is a second hand bike that is like new, only 2600 kms on the clock. The previous owner was anal and really looked after it well.

Then he probably had the battery out and on a charger and he forgot to tighten the battery cable when he put the battery back in. Could be the previous owner's mistake and not Husky's. :D
 
Rough Rider;118345 said:
It is a second hand bike that is like new, only 2600 kms on the clock. The previous owner was anal and really looked after it well.

Rode with the previous owner a few times--was like riding with my Granny --even the Girls riding with rode him away---:) Must have been that he put the battery on charge and did not tighten the cables properly when putting it back --i know when he put it up for sale he never rode it again--being afraid of Murphy---Nice bike that - D.
 
This is the standard proceedure when you get a new bike especially if its a second hand bike.

DSC00167SM-1.jpg


Stu
 
I'd suggest do not expose any more self-inflicted wounds to this crowd .... Good luck with UR bike :)
 
Mate the 610's are the pick of the real big bore DS bikes. last forever, forgiving and very capable. Now go ride the thing or I'll get the Wallabies on to you
 
your not alone, happens to any bike, my next door neighbours drz400 has had it happen a few times, just dodgy fitment, most likely the case was he had the battery out to charge and forgot to tighten terminal :D
 
icebergstu;118506 said:
This is the standard proceedure when you get a new bike especially if its a second hand bike.

DSC00167SM-1.jpg


Stu

Stu the one thing I had a problem with you have not addressed in your prep. The battery and terminals are still fitted to you completly disassembled bike :lol:
 
ghte;118514 said:
Mate the 610's are the pick of the real big bore DS bikes. last forever, forgiving and very capable. Now go ride the thing or I'll get the Wallabies on to you

The Wallabies, who are they? :doh:

I don't know if you watched last weeks game, what an epic :thumbsup:

Thanks for the confidence booster for the bike; appreciated.
 
Blazes;118485 said:
Rode with the previous owner a few times--was like riding with my Granny --even the Girls riding with rode him away---:) Must have been that he put the battery on charge and did not tighten the cables properly when putting it back --i know when he put it up for sale he never rode it again--being afraid of Murphy---Nice bike that - D.

M, thanks for that. I'm happy to see that you sorted out your vibration issues.
 
No offense dude, but come on! Riding a motorcycle is one thing but it is a good idea to perform preventative maintenance (this includes the inspection and tightening of ALL fasteners, including you battery terminal bolts! If a guy is going to ride alone or with friends he or she would be alot better off to have a good understanding on basic motorcycle repair and troubleshooting to help himself or his friends. I wish you the best and NO it is not and omen. You have bought the best brand of motorcyclr there is on the planet! (In my opinion) Your buddies XR makes me laugh and the Husky is and EASY choice over that! Good luck and if you are prepared for your next ride I am sure it will be a good one.
 
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