Husaberg

Husaberg AB
Subsidiary
Industry Motorcycle
Founded 1988
Headquarters Mattighofen, Austria
Parent KTM
Website www.husaberg.com

Husaberg is a manufacturer of enduro motorcycles with four and two-stroke engines, the displacements ranging from 125 cc to 650 cc. Originally based in Sweden, its motorcycles are now developed and manufactured in Austria by parent company KTM.

History

Foundation

Husaberg Motor AB was established in 1988 from the circumstances arisen out of the purchase of the motorcycle division of Swedish company Husqvarna by Italian Cagiva in 1987. Cagiva shifted the production of motorcycles to Varese, Italy. A group of engineers led by Thomas Gustavsson decided to stay back in Sweden and continue to work on their project. Husaberg Motor AB was registered in January 1988. The other Husqvarna employees who joined Husaberg were Ruben Helmin (Husqvarna chief engineer and Husaberg's first managing director), Urban Larsson (Husqvarna designer[1] ), Björn Elwin (chief of Husqvarna test department). Roland Söderqwist, a small Swedish mechanical firm owner was also involved in the Foundation of the company. The first factory was set up in a woodshed at lake Vättern in the town of Husabergs Udde from which the name of the company is derived.[2]

The name Husaberg was only made official by Gustavsson when entering an enduro race at Skillingaryd, as he was forced to declare the make of his motorcycle.[3]

The Husaberg team tried to compensate for their lack of funds by their courage to rely on technical innovations and could never afford to hire established professional riders but rather ambitious rookies such as Joël Smets, Jimmie Eriksson, Walter Bartolini, Kent Karlsson, Anders Eriksson, Jaroslav Katriňák, Mike Tosswill and Peter Jansson.[4]

Takeover by KTM

Good results on the tracks could not compensate for slow sales, and Husaberg was eventually purchased by the Austrian motorcycle manufacturer KTM in 1995.[5]

Although Husaberg motorcycles have been produced at the KTM factory in Mattighofen, Austria since 2003, and the development department is also at KTM in Mattighofen, the Motorsport department remains in Sweden.[6][7]

Husaberg's previous slogan, "Ready to Race" was adopted by KTM as its own. Husaberg's current slogan is now "Pure Enduro"[5][8][9]

End of the Husaberg brand

In 2014 Husaberg will be celebrating not only its 25th anniversary but it will be the last year of the brand. In January 2013 Stefan Pierer, The current CEO of KTM-Sportmotorcycle AG who is also 51% shareholder of KTM AG, purchased 100% stake in Husqvarna AG from BMW through his company Pierer Industrie AG and renamed it to Husqvarna Sportmotorcycle GmbH. Although Husaberg AB and Husqvarna Sportmotocycle GmbH have not been merged,[10] it was mutually decided by both KTM and Pierer Industrie that Husaberg brand will cease to exist, citing to reunite what came out of shared roots 25 years ago. Husqvarna will be using Husaberg's technology while keeping the more iconic brand name of Husqvarna.[11] The new motorcycles will be using the traditional colors of Husqvarna blue, yellow and white.

Reliability

The earlier Husaberg engines (19891996) were known to have premature engine failures due to the fact that they do not have an oil pump and rely on oil delivery from the timing chain. The reliability and quality of the engines have improved over the years and, from 1997 on, have been comparable to that of more established brands.[12]

Palmares

Joakim Ljunggren at the 2010 WEC Grand Prix of Italy

Husaberg won the FIM 500 cc Motocross World Championship with Belgian rider Joël Smets in 1995, 1997 and 1998.[13]

They also won 6 Enduro World Championships in 1990, 1991 (2), 1995, 1996 and 1998. Three more Junior Enduro World Championships followed in 2005/2006 by Joakim Ljunggren and in 2009 by Oriol Mena.

Military use

The Swedish military uses Husaberg motorcycles, notably for the demonstration team, the Arméns Lejon.[14]

Models

The current lineup includes enduro models only. The supermoto, motocross and cross-country (wide ratio gearing, no lighting kit) models have been discontinued. The model names are all composed of two letters: "F" as "Four-Stroke" and "T" as "Two-Stroke" both followed by an "E" as in "Enduro". Some older models were also listed with the number of gears: 4 or 6. Another identifiiny letter as a suffix was an "e" indicatiing the motorcycle had and electric start system e.g. FE 600e.

Previous models included different displacements, such as:

2014 models

They will be offering enduro models only in both two-stroke and four-stroke. This is the last opportunity to own a pure Husaberg. All models will have new 25th anniversary graphics. The 250 four-strokes will be getting an all new engine, new exhaust system and an all new ECU. All models will be receiving all new suspension settings. The 4CS USD WP Closed Cartridge forks have been extensively revised. The 250/350 4-stroke frames have been improved creating a lighter and more nimble frame. The lower triple clamp has been redesigned to ensure a smoother fork action. And finally all models will receive a new improved Trail Tech speedo.

4-stroke Enduro:

Two-stroke Enduro:

2011 models

Besides technical refinements for the existing models, Husaberg is for the first time in its 22-year history offering two-stroke enduro models.

4-stroke Enduro:

4-stroke Motocross:

Supermoto:

Two-stroke Enduro:

2010 models

The model lineup for 2010 adds three new models to the program. All models are based on the chassis and engine that was introduced in 2009. The models[15] are:

Enduro:

Motocross/cross country:

Supermoto:

2009 models

For 2009 there are two enduro models available with the new revolutionary engine and a lot of other technical highlights:

Enduro:[16]

2008 Models

The current models for 2008 are as follow:

Enduro:[17]

Supermoto:[18]

2009 Redesign

On November 6, 2007, at the International Motorcycle Exhibition in Milano, Husaberg unveiled a totally new design for the FE 450 E, announced as the 2009 model.[19] Apart from sporting new fairing, the new design will include a totally revamped engine, in a new position, rotated 180 degrees from top to bottom, and inclined forward at 70 degrees from vertical. The carburetor will be replaced by an EFI injection system and the chain drive will now be placed on the more standard left side.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.