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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

TE 630? Anyone pick one up yet?

TE 630........... Sswweeeeet

Just had the test ride on my TE 630. Very nice. :thumbsup: Dealer says Cat not fitted, :applause: Lambda is fitted. Slight hesitation occasionally on re-application of throttle after decceleration, it stalled once after 3rd gear decel and clutch application, BUT, eng is tight and lean, it still pulls strongly and smootly into the revs. Idle is high and fluctuating, (my guess it's lean). Gear spacing is good. Ergo's for me are spot on. (178cm) Seat is firm but plenty of padding depth.
I also rode the Orange 690 prior to this and the TE 630 for me feels much better, quicker steering, lighter under motion, more natural ergo's.

Should have it at home tommorrow and will update as things progress.
 
Busted RS;111783 said:
Just had the test ride on my TE 630. Very nice. :thumbsup: Dealer says Cat not fitted, :applause: Lambda is fitted. Slight hesitation occasionally on re-application of throttle after decceleration, it stalled once after 3rd gear decel and clutch application, BUT, eng is tight and lean, it still pulls strongly and smootly into the revs. Idle is high and fluctuating, (my guess it's lean). Gear spacing is good. Ergo's for me are spot on. (178cm) Seat is firm but plenty of padding depth.
I also rode the Orange 690 prior to this and the TE 630 for me feels much better, quicker steering, lighter under motion, more natural ergo's.

Should have it at home tommorrow and will update as things progress.

Gofor it! Idle settles down afte a while. Mine stalled a few times at first too ... but now OK. If it´s still got the original exhaust, it´ll still have the Cat. Think the first (and cheapest thingto do is to fit the plug and undo the Lambda sensor. Didn´t like the Orange either. Have fun!
 

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I spooned on some Motoz tires last night (man, that's a LOT of work in 90 degree heat + humidity).

I hopped on this morning for the ride to work (about 90% gravel roads if I choose that route) and discovered a flat tire. I must have pinched a tube :(
 
BrandonR;112025 said:
They always do those demos with nice soft MX tires, I want to see him do it that quick with a stiff DOT tire.

I'll bet they even use tire warmers too. The only time I've had one go that easy was fixing a flat on the trail while the tire was "HOT". I've even thought of buying a warmer just to change tires at home.
 
I just pulled my rear tire off and replaced the tube and rim tape. It really was as easy as the video shows. A LOT better than yesterday.
 
Jodiesel;112513 said:
Sweet! Thanks for that video. Rim lock? Our wheel doesn't have that, eh?

Not OEM, anyway. The rims are drilled for them, though. They aren't really necessary unless you're interested in running really low tire pressures, if I understand it correctly.
 
630SM (in city traffic, hot weather and pushing it), without the converter and with the speed kit (twin Arrows & plug): 6.6 L/100km = 35.6 US MPG (I hope I´ve converted it right).

Think I could even get less MPG if I really wanted.
 
organ donor;112762 said:
Think I could even get less MPG if I really wanted.

LOL, Yes I believe you are right. When people claim to get 55 on the 610 I really wonder how it's even possible.

I have tried to run a tank as calmly and slowly as I could to see what the 'best case' mileage is.

I've never been able to do it:lol: I ALWAYS forget the test after a day or two and end up catching myself in a wheelie or drifting through a turn on a gravel road.:doh:
 
xymotic;112773 said:
LOL, Yes I believe you are right. When people claim to get 55 on the 610 I really wonder how it's even possible.

I have tried to run a tank as calmly and slowly as I could to see what the 'best case' mileage is.

I've never been able to do it:lol: I ALWAYS forget the test after a day or two and end up catching myself in a wheelie or drifting through a turn on a gravel road.:doh:

Staying under 5k during the breakin period and sticking to mostly 55mph roads I got 59mpg on my 610. I don't know what it is right now though I haven't filled it at the pump lately but my rear tire is done at 1400 miles. :)
 
Stroker Ace;112102 said:
I'll bet they even use tire warmers too. The only time I've had one go that easy was fixing a flat on the trail while the tire was "HOT". I've even thought of buying a warmer just to change tires at home.

Toss your tire out in the sun 20-30 minutes before you start. In the winter, I lay the tire down on the ground and stick a small space heater in it to warm it up. Well, not the Husky knobblies, they go on pretty easy (MT21, Michelin Desert, D606, etc.) - but my streetbike tires...

The MoPro tire spoons are VERY nice. I used steel tire irons in the past, but then I was convinced to try a set of the Motion Pro spoons. I'm amazed how much nicer the Motion Pro spoons are (the ones with the loop in the handle the guy in the video used). Disclaimer - I know some of the guys at MoPro. But if their stuff stunk I would still say so (or at least not recommend it!). :cool:

I'm not down to 10 minute tire changes, but it's pretty quick. I use a 5 gallon bucket as my "tire stand" - the sprocket/rotor go right into the hole and I don't have to worry about bending the rotor.
 
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