Hmm, its like a knifing, if it knifes hard enough the front tire is overwhelmed and can washout but I save it before its really a complete washout. I've always noticed this behavior before the KTM, but I just figured it was normal as this is my first bike(well big bike). The KX has new MX52s, the KTM came with MX51s and out in the desert the front MX51 on the KTM actually has a bad habit of not biting for a slight moment when inputting an initial turn, flat tracking on sand, loose dirt, desert terrain, and then before you start to wash out the front end the MX51 will finally bite. Its disconcerting but when diving into a rut or berm, the MX51 on the KTM grips great and doesn't slip. Nontheless, the KTM isn't the issue and I've herd the MX51 fronts tend to do that, I digress.
Thanks KXDINO, a lot of great info I had trouble finding. I have the Pro Circuit links and my triple clamps are Applied Racing, not sure what the offset is because they don't list it on the website. So I would assume 22mm, that is stock I believe, and if they didn't list it maybe that means stock offset. 22mm is pretty short, should be good.
So I set my forks 5mm above the clamps(stock should be 8mm, and this is measured below the fork caps), and set the sag to 100mm, from 90mm, and 5mm more than what treeDfool suggested, and tried it out at the track today. Significant difference, in the right direction. At first, starting out taking it slow turning into berms the bike didn't washout, the front end didn't slip, felt very planted and predictable. In addition I felt the sag change improved the handling on jumps, felt more predictable when seat bouncing and compressing off the face, but this could just be inspired confidence from the turns. Went back out on the track, starting to pick up speed and dive harder into the berms and I could start to get the front end to knife or tuck. Take a typical 180 outside berm, standing up leaning the bike over entering the berm, get settled with the lean angle, letting off the brakes and go to sit forward and slip the clutch and punch the throttle, and the front end tucks, or like the front tire will slip and my bars yank to the inside, I begin fall over to the inside(and a bit forward into my bars), and I throttle through this and stand the bike back up and complete the berm. Is this normal for the KX? It seems to me, as I go 70% into berms the bike handles perfect, as I go 90-100% into berms the bike still has the knife/tuck issue, and it seems to happen when I really move the weight forward, slowing down, going my full speed or pace.
Its mid turn, roughly, from beginning of the turn I set the bike standing up, standing up I weight the front end with my body position, and when I'm ready to go from brakes to throttle Ill begin to sit forward and the bike will tuck, but I haven't necessarily let off the brakes yet and into throttle, safe to say Im still on the brakes and the throttle seems to correct the tuck. Im thinking my front fork low-speed compression needs to be upped a few clicks, slow down the front compressing when all the weight shifts forward so I can get on the throttle before(what seems to me) the front end gets too steep and the trail goes negative and my front tire goes unstable. Didn't touch the clickers today, but I changed my technique by not slamming my butt so far forward when transitioning from standing to sitting, and as I sat I kept my posture up a bit more to weight the back end and keep it from stinkbugging too much. This change in technique never ran into the front end issue, so maybe the bike handles as it should and I just need to correct my technique, although since I'm trying to change my technique Im not going 100%, probably 85-90%.
So I think Im chasing my issue correctly, gunna try the front low speed compression, maybe the rear low speed rebound? All things considered I think 26.5 degrees on the head angle would help, it seems to be just when the front end goes too far forward and the trail decreases to the point the front end gets very unstable and "pulls the chair out" from my weight and inputs, but I'm leaning towards KXDINOs advice and Im gunna leave it alone. Geometrically I've got the bike issue mostly solved, so now maybe fine tune it with the suspension adjustments. What do you guys think?
Setting my sag, my static sag was around 40-41mm. Whats the static sag supposed to be? Is my spring too light or maybe worn?
KXDINO, on a related note was considering buying an 03, 04 05 KX125 and was wondering, whats the head angle on the 03 125? You know if its a good handler 125 like the 04-08 or is it more like an 02? And when we are referring to steering head tube angle, what are we referring to? Is the 26 or 27 degrees in reference to the frame design, or is it in reference to the way the frame sits with the stock suspension setup?
Thanks for all your help guys, a lot of good information here.