One Deluxe Dual-Sporter, Hold The Compromises For years, dual-purpose bikes have been crippled by compromises. Since most
manufacturer surveys indicate that such machines spend the majority of their
time on public streets, the bikes developed from such surveys exhibit a marked
pavement bias. That's fine for those who do indeed use their bikes as commuters
or as a way to do chores around town. But for those who like a lot of dirt in
their diet, those bikes don't cut it.
The solution for enterprising aftermarket companies and riders willing to tread
the grey area of legality has been to convert "real" dirt bikes into their
vision of dual-sport bikes. Often, this included nothing more than adding lights
(including a brake light), a mirror and a horn. Voila, a trip to the local motor
vehicle department with said machine often yielded a license plate, though
technically, said bike didn't meet the letter of the law, especially in more
stringent states like California.
That appears to have changed.
Ever since the introduction of the Racing Four-Stroke (RFS) line, owners have
disregarded KTM's pleas to avoid putting these bikes on the street. Due to the
limited oil capacity, lack of cush drive rear hub and emissions controls, among
other things, the RFS bikes weren't suited to spending lots of time droning down
the highway in top gear. If you wanted to do that, KTM recommended the LC4-based
bikes, upon whose engines the Dakar Rally racers are built. Those are the really
bulletproof motors.
That didn't stop people from converting the new-generation RFS thumpers anyway.
That's because they wanted a bike that was truly dirt-worthy - one that was
light, responsive, well-suspended and actually fun to ride in the dirt.
LC4-powered bikes tended to be built like tanks and had their niche, but it
usually wasn't what hard-core dirt riders wanted. Most of these enthusiasts
weren't interested in spending hours on an interstate to get to a trail; they
treated them like regular dirt bikes and loaded them into trucks, vans or
trailers to get to their chosen ride area. Once there and unloaded, the only
time they really cared about being street-legal was when it came time to pop
onto a county road in order to transit to another trail.
Over the years, KTM noticed that converted bikes weren't blowing transmissions
or breaking hubs or falling apart as had been originally feared. Seeing this,
KTM also saw an opportunity not to be missed: Let's give the consumer what they
want straight from the factory. After all, that's what KTM is famous for,
offering more dirt models than any other manufacturer simply because one size
does not fit all, at least in KTM's world. So, based largely on input from KTM
North America, the Austrian factory came up with two new models for 2007: the
450 EXC and the 525 EXC, both 50-state street-legal.
What's the difference between these new EXCs and the previous generation which
weren't, of course, street-legal? Not much, actually. What KTM did was add
street-legal lighting (high-/low-beam headlight, taillight with brake light
circuitry), DOT-approved turnsignals/mirrors/horn and corresponding handlebar
switches and EPA-friendly emissions controls (air pump, vapor-collecting
canister and a slightly quieter muffler). Really. Oh, they also come with
DOT-approved knobbies - ISDE-legal Pirelli Scorpions that worked quite well on a
recent introductory ride in Ohio. Your bike could well be fitted with Michelins
or something else once it comes time for replacements.
The cost of this factory conversion in dirt penalties? About three less
horsepower and a half-dozen extra pounds compared to the dirt-only 2006.
To demonstrate the new 450 EXC's prowess, KTM invited the enthusiast press to
the Buckeye State where nearly 100 miles of typical southern Ohio riding
awaited. Ever hear of the Little Burr National Enduro? That's the area KTM
selected. In fact, many of the trails had been used recently for a local enduro
as well as a dual-sport ride, so it provided an excellent opportunity to sample
the bike in conditions very representative of what the likely buyer might
encounter - at least east of the Mississippi.
It started at the Vinton County Fairgrounds, home base to the Enduro Riders
Association, and employed a few miles of pavement before turning into the woods
for the first of many miles of supremely fun trails. Recent rain and fallen
autumn leaves combined to prove just how slick the infamous southern Ohio clay
can be, but our guides from the ERA as well as KTM's Robbie Jenks (the recently
crowned AMA National Hare Scrambles Champion) and Mark Hyde (former BlackWater
100 winner, multi-time ISDT/ISDE medalist and victor in countless enduros and
hare scrambles back East) made sure that we didn't get in over our heads. It
wasn't like a SoCal dual-sport ride, that's for sure.
You may remember that the dirt-only 2006 450 EXC earned high praise from many
testers in our 450cc Enduro Shootout earlier this year. The street-legal 2007
450 EXC is very much like that competent dirt bike. Our ride provided plenty of
variety as far as terrain. We rode up snotty, slick, clay trails covered in the
aforementioned leaves, down shallow creeks lined with flat rock, through
relatively tight second-gear tree sections and on smooth dirt roads as well as
paved ones to link trails together.
In other words, we took the EXCs on nearly every type of trail that you'd tackle
on an honest-to-goodness woods weapon. Oh, one other thing: Early in the day, we
even visited the local sheriff to indeed prove that they'd pass muster from a
law enforcement officer's point of view.
Did we ever feel hampered by the
street gear? To be honest, the only things that we recall noticing that you
wouldn't think of when riding a regular dirt bike was the mirror (our test units
came with only the left mirror installed) and the rear blinkers. When standing,
the mirror often hits your forearm so you've got to adjust it to where it sits
fairly far forward, limiting its usefulness on the highway.
As for the turnsignals, the front ones are fairly well protected, and no one in
our group inflicted damage. The same cannot be said for the rears - in
particular the left rear. Its solid mounting design precludes it from giving way
when struck, especially when swinging your leg over the seat to get on or off
the bike. Unless you're a world-class hurdler, your boot tends to kick that left
rear turn signal. As the day wears on and you wear out, it gets a little more
difficult to swing your foot sufficiently high enough to clear that little bit
of the DOT-mandated kit. In several cases, the blinkers dangled by their wires
before lunch, but only for a few miles before disappearing completely. Sure, one
or two of the bikes' signals suffered legitimate crash damage, but it seemed
like older and less limber the rider, the greater the danger to the blinker.
Surely there's a way to make the mount more flexible or swing out of the way.
Other than that, however, we can only praise the 450 EXC. It worked so well in
the course of our one-day demo ride that we rarely even remembered the fact that
we were on street-legal machines-right down to the tires! It doesn't have that
cutting-edge race bike feel, but you can still wick it up and make good time
down most any trail. The suspension felt softer than you'd expect for a racer -
more so as they broke in and mud accumulated - but this isn't meant to be a
racer. It's geared toward the dirt junkie who doesn't want to let the lack of a
license plate limit the miles of trail he can ride in a day.
So the new EXC is softer, a little heavier and a little mellower in power
delivery than the old EXC or the XC line. Big deal. That didn't keep us from
having a great time on a great ride. All of us treated the bikes no differently
than regular dirt bikes, and rarely did we feel hindered in any way. They
threaded through the trees, creeks, rocks and hills just fine. Dual-sport rides
tend to be all-day affairs anyway, so the slightly softer, less edgy feel is
going to be a plus as the motor isn't going to hit as hard and the supple
suspension won't beat you up as the hours roll by. Those in the more arid parts
of the country where speeds are higher might find the suspension a little too
soft, but that's an easy fix.
While the EXCs did exhibit the typical reluctance of emissions-controlled bikes
to start and keep running without the choke on a cold morning, once warmed up,
they carbureted fine. There didn't seem to be any lean spot or bogging at low
rpm, and rarely did they pop when suddenly shutting the throttle and
decelerating. The power simply flowed, with best results coming from liberal use
of the meaty midrange. It doesn't need a lot of clutch work, and the six-speed
gearbox shifted positively.
The 15/45 gearing seems on the tall side, and this is a concession to the EPA
for the bike to pass things like a ride-by sound test - lower rpm at a given
road speed, you see. At first we were a bit alarmed, but unless you spend a lot
of time on trails more suitable for trials bikes, first should be low enough.
Sixth, of course, will get you down the road at more than the legal limit
without strain. In fact, we often found ourselves running along in fifth gear
down the pavement at an indicated 60 or 65 mph with the engine just loafing
before realizing that sixth was still available. If you want to lower first and
close the gap between first and second a bit, replace the countershaft sprocket
with a 14-tooth. Or you can try the 14/48 gearing like last year's dirt-only
EXC; that should satisfy you and still keep the thing from revving its guts out
at freeway speeds.
KTM seems to have found a way to satisfy some very conflicting requirements from
different camps with the 2007 EXC. First of all, it took a look at the intended
buyer and started with a genuine dirt bike, just like a number of enthusiasts
did. Then it added the components demanded by the law without those items
diluting the usefulness of the bike in the dirt.
In the end, KTM's 2007 450 EXC is the dual-purpose bike you'd probably build if
you were first and foremost interested in riding trails all day except for the
occasional road section to fill the tank or your belly, or to get to another
trail. If you want to ride mostly dirt roads and pavement, get something else.
This thing is a deluxe trail machine for $7995 that you can legitimately take on
the street but without the compromises other bikes have succumbed to.