We went to OIR Sunday, took him a session to get into his groove. After that he looked normal on it. I left the clickers in standard, started at 149psi as a recommendation off the net. We finished at 134 psi as the spot he liked the most. His only complaint so far was that rear wouldn’t settle. We have a lot more break in time to go but might have to drop the rear spring rate. He’s tall but weighs nothing at 6’2” and 155lb.Keep Screws very snug - not gorilla TIGHT
Check often when new - hardly ever after
Keep an eye on the shifter screw - very snug - not tight. it's a taper on the shaft
Keep an eye on the spokes when new
Silencer screws.
Motor mounts - head stay
Air forks -
Get your spring rate first ---- Set in middle clicker range, keep reducing pressure 3-5 lbs until he hears the clunk, go back up 3-5 psi and that's his spring rate.
The manual settings were off for me - ya gotta do the tests so he can feel the bike changing and it will change.
It can go from beauty to beast if not in the ballpark. Or from a sled to a scalpel. Take the time to try different pressures.
Now you can play with clickers
Don't make the chain too tight - keep some slack -
Congrats and you are spot on with the two stroke trend - Used bikes, Beta, TM, KTM, Yamaha ......... Wonder if we see Honda, Suzuki, or Kawasaki make a move. Google search Two-Stroke Tuesdays - some spectacular stuff.Oh - and F-Yeah on the two stroke -!!!!!
Yea the suspension is so adjustable you can way right and way wrong in one day if messing with it. Can be frustrating but rewarding too. Still not where I want mine to be but I’m gonna try up 2 spring rates in the shock and a different linkage.Keep Screws very snug - not gorilla TIGHT
Check often when new - hardly ever after
Keep an eye on the shifter screw - very snug - not tight. it's a taper on the shaft
Keep an eye on the spokes when new
Silencer screws.
Motor mounts - head stay
Air forks -
Get your spring rate first ---- Set in middle clicker range, keep reducing pressure 3-5 lbs until he hears the clunk, go back up 3-5 psi and that's his spring rate.
The manual settings were off for me - ya gotta do the tests so he can feel the bike changing and it will change.
It can go from beauty to beast if not in the ballpark. Or from a sled to a scalpel. Take the time to try different pressures.
Now you can play with clickers
Don't make the chain too tight - keep some slack -
You’re not wrong. But I’m tryin to be different here. Austrian machines would adopt SSS, could be the cats meow.Ride it until you get tired of screwing with it, then go buy a Yamaha and you'll be happy.
I’m boycotting Japanese brands at the moment because dealers are adding Covid premium’s to the price. More than one KTM dealer was generous with pricing.Ride it until you get tired of screwing with it, then go buy a Yamaha and you'll be happy.
Can’t, stock limited.Ktm/husky handling is far superior to yamaha. Add Ohlins and you cant beat them.
Race tech site says the stock rear spring is what my kid needs at 155, I don't believe it. He s getting more deflection than dampening at the moment. They also recommended 145 psi in the fork, he was happy at 136.My 17 husky 250f handled great stock. My 18 350 isn’t near as comfortable as that husky. Both have wp aer48. Wonder what stock spring rates were....