Sasha Pave
Husqvarna
AA Class
Took the new bike out into the desert for a few days for the first time and got to run it through its paces. It's a 2009 TE610, mostly stock. We rode in Saline Valley (near Death Valley) for 3 days.
Most of the riding was high speed desert. Lots of sand, with quite a bit of slow rocky climbing and a bit of snow.
I thought I'd share some observations. It was the first weekend I've spent on the Husky in the dirt. Most of my experience is on small dirt bikes or large ADV rigs.
- The geometry of the TE is exactly what I was looking for. It's more dirt-bike than dual-sport. It's stable at speed and still handles slow crawling well. It did wobble a bit on the really higher speed (50+) sandy trails, but nothing too concerning. And nothing a steering damper couldn't correct.
- The turning radius could be tighter.
- The bike is pretty crash-worthy like a dirt bike should be.
- I was a bit concerned over the open screen intake on the airbox.
- The bar risers were a good addition for comfort standing.
- Footpegs are too narrow and set a bit too far forward (even with the relocation brackets).
- Clutch pull is really stiff even with a new cable routed outside the radiator.
- The FI worked great. I rode from 0-7500 feet and the bike hardly noticed.
- I'm running Dunlop 606 and they worked well. Since we were in the middle of nowhere I ran them at 20psi. Curious what they are like at lower pressure.
- The transmission had a nice wide ratio, could have used just a bit less in 1st gear for crawling.
- Shock seemed to get harsh when heated up (there was lots of washboard). Forks were flawless.
- Noticed some weeping on the head gasket on the right side (rear brake side) of the engine.
- The stock headlight is useless.
- Seems about 20% less power than the KTM 690.
Anyhow, just thought I'd share some observations. Overall I'm pleased with the performance and reliability. My next mods will probably be some pegs. I'd love to find an aftermarket adjustable clutch lever but something tells me that might be difficult.
Take care,
Sasha
Most of the riding was high speed desert. Lots of sand, with quite a bit of slow rocky climbing and a bit of snow.
I thought I'd share some observations. It was the first weekend I've spent on the Husky in the dirt. Most of my experience is on small dirt bikes or large ADV rigs.
- The geometry of the TE is exactly what I was looking for. It's more dirt-bike than dual-sport. It's stable at speed and still handles slow crawling well. It did wobble a bit on the really higher speed (50+) sandy trails, but nothing too concerning. And nothing a steering damper couldn't correct.
- The turning radius could be tighter.
- The bike is pretty crash-worthy like a dirt bike should be.
- I was a bit concerned over the open screen intake on the airbox.
- The bar risers were a good addition for comfort standing.
- Footpegs are too narrow and set a bit too far forward (even with the relocation brackets).
- Clutch pull is really stiff even with a new cable routed outside the radiator.
- The FI worked great. I rode from 0-7500 feet and the bike hardly noticed.
- I'm running Dunlop 606 and they worked well. Since we were in the middle of nowhere I ran them at 20psi. Curious what they are like at lower pressure.
- The transmission had a nice wide ratio, could have used just a bit less in 1st gear for crawling.
- Shock seemed to get harsh when heated up (there was lots of washboard). Forks were flawless.
- Noticed some weeping on the head gasket on the right side (rear brake side) of the engine.
- The stock headlight is useless.
- Seems about 20% less power than the KTM 690.
Anyhow, just thought I'd share some observations. Overall I'm pleased with the performance and reliability. My next mods will probably be some pegs. I'd love to find an aftermarket adjustable clutch lever but something tells me that might be difficult.
Take care,
Sasha
