Hey all.
I decided last minute to race the local LACC race, here in Louisiana. Before I begin my race review, and ask a few questions, a little about myself.
I am 47 years old, and I used to race a 2015 KTM 300 XC-W. I had the suspension redone by KTM World in Georgia (they do most of the privateer GNCC guys, and specialize in the 300). On that bike, I had basically everything you could buy, for a bike. I love it. I normally race the 40B class, and finish mid pack (7-12). On a good day, I can run in the top 3 or 5. I moved down south about 5 years ago. Before that, I was a desert racer, so those are my roots. I am not as comfortable in tight woods and mud, as I am in high speed desert and dust. Most of my buddies say I take about 20 minutes to get really rolling, and I am a strong finisher.
Now the race.
As of the time I left home, I am only 30 miles and 2 hours into the bike, having ridden it once, last weekend. My plan was to arrive early, so I could practice some starts, and get a little more used to the bike. I got there about 2.5 hours before green flag. I figured I had plenty of time. Um... yeah. Owning one of these things makes you a rock star.
Signup was short and fast. Even in those 10 minutes, the bike began to draw a crowd. It took me another 20 minutes to get through all the questions, and set up my staging area (my wife and kids were on the way, so I had more than I usual bring, to make them comfortable). During camp setup, I got even more attention. I simply couldn't gear up. I let a couple of people I trust ride in through the open field where we stage, while I answer more questions. I must have had 25 people at one point, checking out the bike. It was never less than 3 or so, checking it out. Finally, about 60 minutes to green flag, I managed to get geared up, because my wife showed up, and I started paying attention to getting them setup for the day, instead of answering questions.
After gearing up, and stretching, I rode to the riders meeting. More attention, pictures, and questions. I'll admit, it was super cool. I mean come on, I'm only a B racer. We don't normally get this kind of attention. With 45 minutes to green flag, I head to the starting line, to practice some starts.
That was crazy. Talk about drawing a crowd. I ended up drag racing basically everyone, from every class. Everyone want to watch, or challenge. And of course, the bike NEVER lost. I smoked everyone to the hole. But, I will say, she is a beast to stop. It was a VERY long start straight. I am basically full speed before the 180 degree, flat track right turn, into the trees. Trying to get her to slow down was tough. After that, I did a few hundred yards at speed down a short section of trail I wasn't supposed to be on. Then I headed back to the truck, with 25 minutes to green flag.
I plugged her in to my Harbor Freight generator, and started fast charging her on 220v. I was at roughly 80-85% (maybe 90%). With 5 minutes before the pro's green flag, I was topped to 100%, and headed to the line. As I rode on the side, past the lines, it was like being a rock star. Everyone was pointing and taking pictures. I decide to race the 40C class this race, as its the very last line to leave, meaning I would have the shortest time (the leader is given the white flag at 90 minutes into the race). I wasn't in to win this race, but to check battery life, and feel the bike I real race trails.
Dead engine start (laughs), green flag drops, and I smoke everyone to the hole. My wife said I had a 8-10 bike length lead, into the beginning of the turn. There was a pileup in the first corner, I was told, as I hit the binders so hard, the second place guy (my friend Will) went down to avoid hitting me, and took a few guys with him. I feel bad for this, but that will not ahppen anymore, as I grow more comfortable with the bike, and begin to get more aggressive. Passing my wife at the 1 mile point into the race, she said I had a sizeable lead.
I catch several of the guys in earlier classes. I learned quickly, they can't hear you (obviously), and when I yell out 'whoo, whoo, whoo', it scares the crap out of them. They move over pretty quick.
Somewhere during the first lap, on a fairly quick section, I clipped a tree. I haven't cut the bars, but they 'feel' wide, compared to my 300. Most guys around here cut their bars, some as low as 27-28". Anyway, they put us through these two trees that were about 28" wide, on a slight left turn. I clipped the inside left tree, and the bike dropped from under me. By the time I got rolling again, I was in 9th or so.
I worked my way back into 5th over the race, until my right hand started to really hurt on the top of my thumb. I could tell I was getting a nasty blister there. I get blisters like everyone else, but never on the outside knuckles of my throttle thumb. I passed a ton of guys, had a blast.
The bike made it. 1hr, 18 minutes of racing, 30.7 miles according the to digital readout. The entire race I had people filming and taking pictures. Everyone was cheering me on, giving me time updates, hoping I would finish. And when I did, I was mobbed by pro guys, and all the other racers, asking how it was, and cheering for the bike and me that we finished the race. I am not the most emotional person in the world, even if my wife says I am gooey on the inside. But that was... well, lets just say I swear had dirt in my eyes, even if I was wearing goggles.
I just want to say, the dirt bike community, racing families, and everyone involved in this sport is amazing. We may bicker and argue from time to time, but overall we are all some GREAT people. This bike and this race really brought out the smiles in everyone.
So, some things I noticed, and need help on...
1. My 300 has a sub-mount Scott's stabilizer. The base is 3/4" tall, then the bar clamps are another 1" to 1.5" on top of that. The MXR bars feel like they are in my lap. My thumb has a larger blister than I've ever had, and I think part of that is because when I am standing up and attacking the course, the bars feel like the are on my belt, which causes my thumb to rub on the outside knuckle, against the grip. I've looked at bar risers already, but they all look like they are only about 1/2? taller. Anyone else feel like the bars are very low? And does anyone have a suggestion on how to get them taller? Maybe even push them out towards the front tire (I'm not sure about this).
2. The grips are flat bad for me. Not a big deal. I'll get some of the Emig style ones, with doughnut rings.
3. The suspension is kind of stiff. I can make it work, mostly. At about 1 hour into racing, I starting sitting more than standing, as I start to get tired. I can make a soft/plush suspension work when standing and I am fresh. But, I can not make a stiff suspension work when I am tired and sitting in spots I should be standing for. I race down south, where we are single line, tight trails, with nasty and chunky ruts, with tons of exposed roots. The trail ALWAYS gets destroyed at the end of races. I demo'd the 2017 in a sprint race last year, and that suspension was AWESOME for me, when I got tired at the end of a race. It felt like a trophy truck, just soaking up at the nasty roots and chunky ruts. Can anyone tell or show me how to set the 2018 suspension to be like the 2017 suspension? Or much closer to it, than where it is at now?
Well, that is about it. I ran my GoPro, and if it doesn't make me look like a complete scrub, I'll post it. Also, I'll link a TON pictures that I am sure are to appear over the next couple of days, on Facebook.
If you have an questions, please feel free to ask.
CK696
2018 Redshift MXR
Enduro Engineering Bark Buster, Warp 9 Pegs, Alta Skid Plate, Acerbis Front and Read Disk Guards, Alta Left Hand Rear Brake
I decided last minute to race the local LACC race, here in Louisiana. Before I begin my race review, and ask a few questions, a little about myself.
I am 47 years old, and I used to race a 2015 KTM 300 XC-W. I had the suspension redone by KTM World in Georgia (they do most of the privateer GNCC guys, and specialize in the 300). On that bike, I had basically everything you could buy, for a bike. I love it. I normally race the 40B class, and finish mid pack (7-12). On a good day, I can run in the top 3 or 5. I moved down south about 5 years ago. Before that, I was a desert racer, so those are my roots. I am not as comfortable in tight woods and mud, as I am in high speed desert and dust. Most of my buddies say I take about 20 minutes to get really rolling, and I am a strong finisher.
Now the race.
As of the time I left home, I am only 30 miles and 2 hours into the bike, having ridden it once, last weekend. My plan was to arrive early, so I could practice some starts, and get a little more used to the bike. I got there about 2.5 hours before green flag. I figured I had plenty of time. Um... yeah. Owning one of these things makes you a rock star.
Signup was short and fast. Even in those 10 minutes, the bike began to draw a crowd. It took me another 20 minutes to get through all the questions, and set up my staging area (my wife and kids were on the way, so I had more than I usual bring, to make them comfortable). During camp setup, I got even more attention. I simply couldn't gear up. I let a couple of people I trust ride in through the open field where we stage, while I answer more questions. I must have had 25 people at one point, checking out the bike. It was never less than 3 or so, checking it out. Finally, about 60 minutes to green flag, I managed to get geared up, because my wife showed up, and I started paying attention to getting them setup for the day, instead of answering questions.
After gearing up, and stretching, I rode to the riders meeting. More attention, pictures, and questions. I'll admit, it was super cool. I mean come on, I'm only a B racer. We don't normally get this kind of attention. With 45 minutes to green flag, I head to the starting line, to practice some starts.
That was crazy. Talk about drawing a crowd. I ended up drag racing basically everyone, from every class. Everyone want to watch, or challenge. And of course, the bike NEVER lost. I smoked everyone to the hole. But, I will say, she is a beast to stop. It was a VERY long start straight. I am basically full speed before the 180 degree, flat track right turn, into the trees. Trying to get her to slow down was tough. After that, I did a few hundred yards at speed down a short section of trail I wasn't supposed to be on. Then I headed back to the truck, with 25 minutes to green flag.
I plugged her in to my Harbor Freight generator, and started fast charging her on 220v. I was at roughly 80-85% (maybe 90%). With 5 minutes before the pro's green flag, I was topped to 100%, and headed to the line. As I rode on the side, past the lines, it was like being a rock star. Everyone was pointing and taking pictures. I decide to race the 40C class this race, as its the very last line to leave, meaning I would have the shortest time (the leader is given the white flag at 90 minutes into the race). I wasn't in to win this race, but to check battery life, and feel the bike I real race trails.
Dead engine start (laughs), green flag drops, and I smoke everyone to the hole. My wife said I had a 8-10 bike length lead, into the beginning of the turn. There was a pileup in the first corner, I was told, as I hit the binders so hard, the second place guy (my friend Will) went down to avoid hitting me, and took a few guys with him. I feel bad for this, but that will not ahppen anymore, as I grow more comfortable with the bike, and begin to get more aggressive. Passing my wife at the 1 mile point into the race, she said I had a sizeable lead.
I catch several of the guys in earlier classes. I learned quickly, they can't hear you (obviously), and when I yell out 'whoo, whoo, whoo', it scares the crap out of them. They move over pretty quick.
Somewhere during the first lap, on a fairly quick section, I clipped a tree. I haven't cut the bars, but they 'feel' wide, compared to my 300. Most guys around here cut their bars, some as low as 27-28". Anyway, they put us through these two trees that were about 28" wide, on a slight left turn. I clipped the inside left tree, and the bike dropped from under me. By the time I got rolling again, I was in 9th or so.
I worked my way back into 5th over the race, until my right hand started to really hurt on the top of my thumb. I could tell I was getting a nasty blister there. I get blisters like everyone else, but never on the outside knuckles of my throttle thumb. I passed a ton of guys, had a blast.
The bike made it. 1hr, 18 minutes of racing, 30.7 miles according the to digital readout. The entire race I had people filming and taking pictures. Everyone was cheering me on, giving me time updates, hoping I would finish. And when I did, I was mobbed by pro guys, and all the other racers, asking how it was, and cheering for the bike and me that we finished the race. I am not the most emotional person in the world, even if my wife says I am gooey on the inside. But that was... well, lets just say I swear had dirt in my eyes, even if I was wearing goggles.
I just want to say, the dirt bike community, racing families, and everyone involved in this sport is amazing. We may bicker and argue from time to time, but overall we are all some GREAT people. This bike and this race really brought out the smiles in everyone.
So, some things I noticed, and need help on...
1. My 300 has a sub-mount Scott's stabilizer. The base is 3/4" tall, then the bar clamps are another 1" to 1.5" on top of that. The MXR bars feel like they are in my lap. My thumb has a larger blister than I've ever had, and I think part of that is because when I am standing up and attacking the course, the bars feel like the are on my belt, which causes my thumb to rub on the outside knuckle, against the grip. I've looked at bar risers already, but they all look like they are only about 1/2? taller. Anyone else feel like the bars are very low? And does anyone have a suggestion on how to get them taller? Maybe even push them out towards the front tire (I'm not sure about this).
2. The grips are flat bad for me. Not a big deal. I'll get some of the Emig style ones, with doughnut rings.
3. The suspension is kind of stiff. I can make it work, mostly. At about 1 hour into racing, I starting sitting more than standing, as I start to get tired. I can make a soft/plush suspension work when standing and I am fresh. But, I can not make a stiff suspension work when I am tired and sitting in spots I should be standing for. I race down south, where we are single line, tight trails, with nasty and chunky ruts, with tons of exposed roots. The trail ALWAYS gets destroyed at the end of races. I demo'd the 2017 in a sprint race last year, and that suspension was AWESOME for me, when I got tired at the end of a race. It felt like a trophy truck, just soaking up at the nasty roots and chunky ruts. Can anyone tell or show me how to set the 2018 suspension to be like the 2017 suspension? Or much closer to it, than where it is at now?
Well, that is about it. I ran my GoPro, and if it doesn't make me look like a complete scrub, I'll post it. Also, I'll link a TON pictures that I am sure are to appear over the next couple of days, on Facebook.
If you have an questions, please feel free to ask.
CK696
2018 Redshift MXR
Enduro Engineering Bark Buster, Warp 9 Pegs, Alta Skid Plate, Acerbis Front and Read Disk Guards, Alta Left Hand Rear Brake