• Husqvarna Motorcycles Made In Sweden - About 1988 and older

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 The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.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

Which bike?

"Bitza" , made out of bits of different bikes.
1 The frame is not a 86 WR
2 The swing arm is not a 86 WR
3 The Headlight is not a 86 WR
4 The Radiator shrouds are not 86 WR
5 The upside down forks are not 86 WR

Remember that that bike is advertised as a 86 WR.
 
1 The frame is not a 86 WR
2 The swing arm is not a 86 WR
3 The Headlight is not a 86 WR
4 The Radiator shrouds are not 86 WR
5 The upside down forks are not 86 WR

1) Use the frame with the best holes at the swingarm
2) I do not know how the Australia bikes cam they may have had a key to lock the steering. I did notice that upper roller for the chain which hurts the ankle. wr would be a chain guard but that may limit the tire size depending on what you put on it.
4) I associate the white shrouds with the dual shock frame.

None of that is as significant as things like how many chips come out in the oil or the condition of all the linkage parts on that model. At least for me to answer the question in post 1. It is a whole bike and it is for sale.
 
Why does that 86 have no brake stay? Especially since it's the Xc swing arm. I thought they didn't go to that design until 87 hit.
 
The brake stay to the block that slides in a groove is a 1985 to 1986 change. I would prefer the stay, the swingarm and the backing plate tend to wear on the later version. Even can loosen up the axle if you use the rear brake to hold the bike in place (bike pointing uphill) on a hill. Most of my swingrms with the 85-86 linkage have/had the later set up.
 
Gotcha! Thanks for the info. Never had an 86 so I was interested to see that and both my 85s have the stay. Nothin better than learning something new about old hvas
 
Seems like I'm not supposed to get another bike at the moment. My garage ceiling collapsed yesterday and will take a few dollars to fix.

IMG_0486.JPG
 
No that just means buying the husky is justified... how else you supposed to get over it? Sometimes you just gotta buy a new husky to feel better about the cruel world haha total bummer though. Not only money but labor and time getting it all patched up. Double burn.
 
garage ceiling collapse syndrome its a phenonena sweeping oz at the moment. the last 30 years has seen builders skimp on the nails holding sheets up in the plaster..relyimng more on glue but they also don't insulate the garage roof (even if its in the house roofline..)

so moisture gets on the top of the sheets, rots the plaster around the beams and glue points... then we had a windy winter / spring.
this pressurises the ceilings slightly and Voila! down comes your plaster.... especially with tiled roof.

my old mans back room and kitchen ceilings have come down, all on the west side -- prevailing wind side. insurance should pay as you say the wind has caused it...

PS, those huskys are nuthin...a well known huskynut on the Vinduro scene in vic had 52 huskys, one of every capacity from72 or so up to around mid 80's:eek: . he has thinned the herd a bit recently
 
garage ceiling collapse syndrome its a phenonena sweeping oz at the moment. the last 30 years has seen builders skimp on the nails holding sheets up in the plaster..relyimng more on glue but they also don't insulate the garage roof (even if its in the house roofline..)

so moisture gets on the top of the sheets, rots the plaster around the beams and glue points... then we had a windy winter / spring.
this pressurises the ceilings slightly and Voila! down comes your plaster.... especially with tiled roof.

my old mans back room and kitchen ceilings have come down, all on the west side -- prevailing wind side. insurance should pay as you say the wind has caused it...

PS, those huskys are nuthin...a well known huskynut on the Vinduro scene in vic had 52 huskys, one of every capacity from72 or so up to around mid 80's:eek: . he has thinned the herd a bit recently

It's pretty much as surprize says, except the ceiling was screwed up as all ceilings should be. If your ceiling is nailed up your plasterer doesn't know what they are doing.
Over time the plaster has absorbed moisture and it finally gave way last week.
A mate of mine is a plasterer so he will fix it up for me.
 
The is no difference between the bare frames for the 1986 WR and Cross Country. I got an XC frame to replace the knackered frame on my 86 400 Enduro. The difference is in the removable sub frame. Between 86 and 87 no frame changes mostly plastic configuration.
 
Seems like I'm not supposed to get another bike at the moment. My garage ceiling collapsed yesterday and will take a few dollars to fix.

View attachment 75286

We call that stuff wallboard or sheetrock.
The fire code stuff has fibers in it and is a higher grade product. With an overhead door like that one might think the fire code stuff would be found at a location similar.
 
. Between 86 and 87 no frame changes mostly plastic configuration.

I respectfully disagree. The 87-88 has a black gas tank that attaches with one fastner in the vertical plane near the steering stem. The white tanks of prior attach with a horizontal 6mm bolt. The shock and linkage attachment points are different 86 vs 87. The placement of the frame tubes under the engine has a few variations as time went on.
 
That is likely but I do have a 1987 main frame with no detectable difference to the 1986 frame I have
 
I respectfully disagree. The 87-88 has a black gas tank that attaches with one fastner in the vertical plane near the steering stem. The white tanks of prior attach with a horizontal 6mm bolt. The shock and linkage attachment points are different 86 vs 87. The placement of the frame tubes under the engine has a few variations as time went on.
this....the subframes are also slightly different as the shocks are shaped slightly different above the reservoir. the frame look the same until you start swapping parts, between 86 and 87 there are a ton of differences.
 
I just checked the frames side by side and they are identical .......... because they are both 1986 frames. The PO had hand stamped a 1987 prefix before the XPxxxxxxxx ID for whatever reason. When I got it that prefix number was filled with body filler , sanded, and painted over. Amazing what you find when you strip down to bare metal sometimes
 
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