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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

Skid Plate Options

Well, I just bit the bullet and ordered the B&B plate! Other makers are saying 4-6 weeks in their emails...and they were saying that 6 weeks ago. Wendy said shipping to states is 7-10 Business days. Once the plate is on, I'll really find out what the Terra can take! :banana:
 
Well, I just bit the bullet and ordered the B&B plate! Other makers are saying 4-6 weeks in their emails...and they were saying that 6 weeks ago. Wendy said shipping to states is 7-10 Business days. Once the plate is on, I'll really find out what the Terra can take! :banana:

I ordered my plate from B&B yesterday too. Supporting the local product. They're about 1.5hrs from my home. I believe there's another local company currently doing a bashplate for the Terra too, but aside from hearing that, I haven't heard any more. My Terra has been off the road for the past month waiting for the replacement ECU. I'm expecting it back this week. I'm hoping the bike is back before the bashplate. I already have a box full of goodies waiting to be installed. Knowing my luck I'll get the call to pick it up on Friday, which is when I take off on my DL1000 for a 4 day interstate ride.
 
I like it. Will they make them in black? There isn't much alloy on the bike so I'm liking black. Or maybe anodized grey or gun metal? The price seems reasonable and quality looks great.

Cheers

I like it. Will they make them in black? There isn't much alloy on the bike so I'm liking black. Or maybe anodized grey or gun metal? The price seems reasonable and quality looks great.

Cheers
Dunno' about finish color options, i will check back with them. Meanwhile here's a few shot's i requested off the bike.View attachment 22788View attachment 22789
 
Sent an email to B&B about shipping to the USA. Wendy at B&B said it would run me about 350 US dollars for the skid plate and shipping to California. That's $75 bones for shipping.
I wonder if there were enough interest in a group buy, that might ease the shipping a tad?
 
I'm interested in a group buy...

Kelly from Motosportz just posted that his skidplate with wings should be done by mid-February. If its gonna be ready that soon, I'd like to see it before ordering the B&B...
 
Any thoughts on the solid design of the BB vs the Motosportz which has a # of openings in the plate? I personally like the solid design, it seems that the openings would allow junk to accumulate between the plate and the motor casing, not to mention providing more exposure to damage from road debris bouncing around and upward.

Thanks
Rich in Placitas
 
I'm a fan of solid plates with a drain plug access. I think solid plates are more predictable when going over logs or rocks by the way they glide over them. Lots of holes can snag up on rocks etc. It's a feel thing for me.
 
I'm a fan of solid plates with a drain plug access. I think solid plates are more predictable when going over logs or rocks by the way they glide over them. Lots of holes can snag up on rocks etc. It's a feel thing for me.
+1 but the only drawback being possible worse engine heat dispersion. Might need 2-4 holes to be drilled TO THE SIDES (1-2 per side).
 
I make the Motosportz plate so take my response with a grain of salt.

The holes in the bottom of my plate allow mud to escape (not trapping pounds of mud and leaves) which also helps cooling and also reduce weight. Our plate is twice as thick and welded brackets. This makes it insainly strong which is what that oil line needs. It is a frame connector / skid plate. The rear mounts are CNC machined billet. Our entire plate is CNC billet no sheet metal and much more expensive to build than sheet metal (Yet our plate is still $100 plus less). The other plate shown has a flat sheet metal area between the side wings and rear bracket, this IMHO will not hold up to landing on a rock and will bend up. This was my fear when designing ours and the reason i went through the trouble of building a super stout but low profile plate that is not simple sheet metal. You hit that oil line and your motor is toast. The B&B plate looks nice, not bashing it at all just making observations. thanks

IMG_2804-L.jpg


IMG_2832-L.jpg


IMG_2766-L.jpg
 
I make the Motosportz plate so take my response with a grain of salt.

The holes in the bottom of my plate allow mud to escape (not trapping pounds of mud and leaves) which also helps cooling and also reduce weight. Our plate is twice as thick and welded brackets. This makes it insainly strong which is what that oil line needs. It is a frame connector / skid plate. The rear mounts are CNC machined billet. Our entire plate is CNC billet no sheet metal and much more expensive to build than sheet metal (Yet our plate is still $100 plus less). The other plate shown has a flat sheet metal area between the side wings and rear bracket, this IMHO will not hold up to landing on a rock and will bend up. This was my fear when designing ours and the reason i went through the trouble of building a super stout but low profile plate that is not simple sheet metal. You hit that oil line and your motor is toast. The B&B plate looks nice, not bashing it at all just making observations. thanks

IMG_2804-L.jpg


IMG_2832-L.jpg


IMG_2766-L.jpg


The holes in the bottom of my plate allow mud to escape (not trapping pounds of mud and leaves) which also helps cooling and also reduce weight.

:thumbsup: The ol water hose will make short work of cleaning out this plate......unlike some of the others I own...:thumbsdown:
 
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