2017 KTM\Husky 450 xc\sx review

barefooter

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So over the Easter weekend I had an opportunity to put in a lot of seat time on the 2017 KTM's and Husky 450. Both had 2017 Yeti 120 kits. The one was stock, the other had the Thumper Racing 499 Big Bore kit in it. Cory Derpak at Monashee Adventure Group gave me the opportunity to go crazy on them. He is a great guy, and a fantastic snowbike coach.

Wow is the best description for those rides. The Big Bore especially.

A little bit of a analogy. My KTM 300 gives nothing up to a pre-2016 KTM\Husky 450. Everyone who has ridden it says it is one of the most fun bikes they have been on, and runs extremely well. It is light and snappy. I have a 2017 Yeti 120 kit on it, set up identical to the 450s I rode. At the Silver Star hillcross last weekend, I was shifting between 3rd and 4th up an extremely rutted up track, after letting off a bit for a couple of monster whoops (by then) that had built up at the bottom of the first steep section.

On the stock 450, I was able after the whoops to grab 4th and hold it all the way up the course with no issue. If I had been quicker fanning the clutch I might have grabbed 5th. But it strongly held 4th the entire way up.

On the 499 big bore, I grabbed 4th, accelerated up the steep section, grabbed 5th and was accelerating through the entire rest of the course.

Easter Monday I spent the day riding in the backcountry on the big bore on the backside of Owlshead up the LaForge road. Wasn't the best day - it had snowed overnight and some rain in the am so it was wet, heavy fresh snow. Not exactly ideal for a snirtbike. BUt the big bore pulled everything that I threw at it. I was totally impressed. The other thing is both bikes weighed practically the same as my 2015 KTM 300. Might even a bit less. They are the first 4 strokes I rode that give you the 2 stroke "feel" when you are riding them. You can feel the weight is situated a little higher on the bike, but I definitely did not feel as rat-bagged at the end of the day as I usually do after riding a thumper hard.

Verdict. The 499 Big Bore was the best all-around snowbike I have ever ridden, hands down. My 300 may grab the first two gears quicker in the trees, but once in 3rd it was all over. Plus you have to shift less during the course of the day. I have been blessed to have the opportunity to ride a lot of different bikes, Turbos, Big Bore 450\500s, CR500s, etc. They were hands down the best performing snirtbikes that I have ridden.

Picture just showing what idiots we were....
 

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machinehead

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Great review and opinions.
Do you know the estimated horsepower of the 499 kit ?
Every HP seems to make a huge difference in the fun factor.
 

barefooter

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Great review and opinions.
Do you know the estimated horsepower of the 499 kit ?
Every HP seems to make a huge difference in the fun factor.

Not sure. I don't care about horsepower as much as feel under your ass. :) You could consistently pull one higher gear than the stocker everywhere. And in comparison to my 300, when you hit the deep stuff off of a drop or jump, there was no need to click down a gear.
 

LuckyOnes

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what do you recommend for the all round first timer? there a lots of kits these days. . . stock 450yz
 

barefooter

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what do you recommend for the all round first timer? there a lots of kits these days. . . stock 450yz

Lucky. Shoot me a PM and we can have a quick chat if you want. Depends on how much you want to spend! :)

For best bang for the buck - either a 2015 TS120 kit or an upgraded 2016.5 Yeti if you want to spend a little more $$, but of course have a better kit. The 2015 were the last year of the good welding on the TS, and had the upgraded bearings.

in 5 years of riding, I have come to the conclusion that you do not need any more than a 120, unless it is on a turbo\big bore NOS bike.

Stay away from Camso at least for the 2017 kits.

Greg
 
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