Great channel- I used to ride the 1200 GS and found it was a beast off road. Two years ago made the transition to the 500 and never looked back. Set the bike up very similar to yours. The only time I miss the 1200 is on the days that we ride more than 3 hours of asphalt to the next dint/gravel road, sometimes this is necessary. Other than that the bike is a pure pleasure. It goes anywhere does anything you ask of it plus. The absolute biggest benefit for this 50 year old rider is that the ride is more enjoyable. You are never concerned about picking up the bike when you inevitably go down and you choose your routes for the scenic benefit and not skip beautiful sections because of difficult terrain. On the 500 you enjoy the ride, and remove the constant focus of the" technical aspect" of keeping 600 pounds right side up, on the side of a mountain with baseball size rocks littering the trail and enjoy what you came to do - Ride. Yes I have done the same trips on both bikes. The 1200 can go there. Now I get to take the picture of the poor sap that is exhausted, red faced and sitting on the downed bike getting a shot of water before they pick up the beast. Love the videos keep them coming.
Golden comment Tim. 50+ here with similar thoughts, the 500excf is an amazing machine for adv style exploring, the 990A is more for admiring at this stage. Have adventurized the 500 and ridden all over ID/UT/CO on high speed tarmac transitions and slow sketchy single-track. Its overbuilt for what I use it for but a joy to work on, super reliable and always ready to pounce.
Every bike has a compromise, the main thing is you are happy with what you ask of the bike with realistic expectations👍Adventures are different for different people with personal preferences. Thanks for the video
Considering a 500 but I have a thought...Compared to a 690 there is about 40kg in it. Changing the 690 exhaust saves you about 6kg. Taking off the passenger pegs and will maybe save you another 1kg. Then fitting the light battery the 500 has saves you another few kg. So let’s say 30kg. . You are adding long range tank and high up on the 500. Now on a long ride you need to take 2l oil. So I would say all in all the 690 would be about 28kg heavier all other things being equal. Now in my mind 28kg is still substantial but the 690 carries the fuel low down. Oil change is a minor issue tbh, but does add weight, packing thoughts, and extra planning to trips. I’m more concerned about valve checks at short intervals, even though that is also relatively minor. My real concern with the 500 is the top end rebuild. That compared to the longevity of the 690 engine and “only” 28kg makes the 690 a better steed for distance and all over use. So this means the off-road one intends to do need to justify the compromises. From the clips at the end of the video I don’t think any of that dirt riding NEEDS a 500. A 690 will do fine. So this is what I’m weighing up right now. It’s really difficult to decide! 😅 Excellent video’s btw - really helps one see the pros and cons of the 500.
That was intresting to read, good points on seeing a weight difference in practice . One factor might also be the person's weight as a factor. The weight to power ratio on a ktm500 without a person is higher but when a human weight of 150lb gets added the ktm690 is higher. Start adding a taller person being 180-200lb with gear, food, backpacks , the weight can go up to 220lb very fast. At that point the 690 has a much better weight to power ratio then the 500. Considering the 28kg Me personally I weight 160lb and for a trip plan on taking 40lb(18kg) of gear(20lb of safety gear on my body 20lb on the bike). Boots, helmet, clothing, food, water, tools, armor, equipment can be heavy. If you add the 28kg plus 91kg human with gear on a 690, then compare it to a 500. I think the 690 might not feel so bad doing dirt roads. That being said, the 500 is probably alot more fun to ride
I know this is an old post but you are missing one important point.Its not only the weight,its the balance,ergos and design of two similar looking bikes in the parking lot but in reality 2 completely different bikes .One is a real enduro bike the other can be a very good trail bike.One will never be the other.
@@oscarbear7498 the 2 types of bike feel completely different and handle completely different off road.The 690 also makes its power differently.They are completely different bikes.On a smooth gravel road not much in it,anything else... I have a fully tricked out crf300l with the proper suspension and a ktm 500.The crf is much better than a 690 off road except power wise on long hills and gravel roads.But the crf is not an enduro bike like the 500 is whatever tricks you do to it
Great video! I take my 500 everywhere too and love it. Did 2 weeks solo in Iceland and crossed the interior end-to-end. Like you, I upgraded the tank but also took a fuel bladder as the place is really remote. The fuel bladder is a great solution because I can stow it away when not using it. Love your radio solution! Roll safe! Cheers
Good Day Keith. I have been following you for several years now, always paying careful attention to your recommendations and reviews. Several years ago I purchased a Honda CRF250L to get back into dirt riding - my Ducati Panigale provides all the road fun I need. Now that I have a few years of dirt riding enjoyment including acquiring some gear and basic items such as Mosco Moto 40's and other items you have discussed and reviewed I have made another decision. Your review of your KTM 500 has been inspiring so as I turn 70 and will retire in the beginning of 2025 I purchased a new Husqvarna 2025 501s to begin my retirement travels. Please keep your reviews and insights coming, they are much appreciated. Safe travels... Bob from Calgary
Good review, I run a WR450 adventure bike, set up well , small ADV bikes are capable machines. Couple other things I have done for vibrations etc. Cush hub , excellent, much nicer throughout the drive train. Add Car sway bar rubbers to multiple places on the frame, where you can get them on. I use Landcruiser rubbers as the ID is bigger than most cars. Exhaust, I have experimented with many, basically quieter the better, trying not to loose to much power. I now run a modified ADR muffler, but have a cap I made easy to remove for more bush/ getting on it more. Most of the time I never remove the cap, I have realised & found the power to be perfect running quiet. Long runs on road it’s much nicer. Get your screen height set up right, angle, distance from rider. Big difference over 80km/h Cheers. Missed something, ear plugs 👌
Hi Ben, can tou tell us more about cmthe car sway bar rubbers? I assume they are the ones rhwt secure the sway bar to the chassis. Do you just zip tie them here and there on the bikes frame as to add a bit of weight to the frame and cut down the vibrations? Or use them between the frame and engine/other body parts to cut down the transmission of vibrations between various components ? Thank you !
@@AndreiBanciu howdy mate, I use the type of rubbers that wrap around sway bar Front & rear on cars/SUV. I use Carle ties to hold them onto the frame of the bike...Under the tank main frame back. Both sides of frame down to foot peg mounts. Both sides of frame at the front of motor mounts. I also use large rubber mounts that hold my screen to the handlebars. All just cable tied to parts of the frame etc, if you are running a cross bar on the handlebars, I have a peace of rubber hose wrapped around the cross bar also. If your running an Alloy bash plate, use low density foam behind it while mounting the plate, stop the plate singing
Thanks Keith, very interesting info on your oil changes. I have Husky FE 501 (2015) which has 1.5 litres oil. I have been stretching oil changes out to 20 hours (~600 km). Friends think that's too much, but its good to see that you push your oil changes out even further with no probs. Cheers
Have adventurized my 500EXCF. for extended travel in the west CA/US/MX. Oil changes every 1500-2500km with easy adv style plodding along riding. Easy to do on the trail if necessary. The manual probably assumes 50%+ WOT, not applicable to everyone.
I appreciate your thoughts and experience. My two pence worth, I have 2 KTM: 1290SAR 500EXC-F. I use the 1290 for adventure riding with possible luggage and the 500, is for off road, moto park fun and daily commutes. I really like both bikes and they both serve different functions, although both are adaptable.
Great series of videos! Totally love my 2018 500EXC-F. Have 2 other 2 strokes, & the 500 has its place in my stable! Need the right tool for the job, this fits!
You can also simply ship the oil + filter, etc to one of the places you're going to stay at. Then find any nearby bike/car shop to borrow an oil collecting pan.
Outstanding summary of your setup and experience with the 500 as a lightweight adv bike. I have a 2019 690 that alleviates some of the limitations of the 500 but does sacrifice the off-road capabilities and is 40-45kg heavier.
the 45kg for me was massive, i was so into a 690 after coming from sxf 450 for the last decade and it was to be mine...however i ended up with the 500, 45kg is lot IF YOU GET IN THE SHIT and here in uk you get in the shit fast , it is wet, rocky, sandy, deep mud...if i lived in spain or france i would take 690 no doubt - yeh the 690 meats the road in comparison but my time is not road focus - it is important of course but not the focus
Very nice video. I have been traveling for many years with 2x20 plus central 16l bags, I am packing with a tent, sleeping bag and camping equipment. I don't carry inner tubes though - just a patch kit.
Have tried everything to reduce vibes for high speed transitions. BRP rubber bar mounts, balanced wheels, decent Dunlop 606's, comfortable grips, seat and adv pegs and you'll reduce 80-90% of what's possible to do. 100mph on knobbies is possible, not quite sane, but possible.
I'll be installing the Mako 360 on my 2017 Husky FE501 this weekend. Hope it works as well at killing the vibes as everyone claims it does! I'm also switching out the ODI Emig grips to ODI Rogues.
Hi thanks for the inspiration.. I am building my new adventure bike on a Husky 450FE 2020.. IMS 17L tank, wheel with kush drive and a true north motos rack..
Nice video. I found inspiration from your videos. I soloed the trans. American trail this last summer. Changed the oil 4 times. I was able to find motorex oil. Which surprised me. The oil drain back home. No debris. Actually looked good. Over 11,000K. 19 days straight. Vibration was the fatiguing. My mistake was not straightening the front rim. Wish I bought a new rim. The best thing I did was buy large rally pegs. So I could stand for long periods of time. Thanks for all the info. Safe travels.
Amazing super fun bike with a few mods it will do anything, and easy to service compared to bigger more complex machines even compared to the 690/701 it is about half the time / effort to take apart things.
Another great video. I have run 1500 to 2000 klms between oil drops. But if I have run a hard ride, hot day, tuff climbs and river crossings I'll drop it after 500klms. You soon know when it's had it. You will start to burn oil. Synthetic oil has no shear stability like mineral oil does. It basically turns into thinner... I also tend over fill my motor just give it more life on a long ride. Also what I found good was goin one colder on the plug, especially if I am in hotter climates 30+ degrees. My std plug is an 8, I go upto 9.. you guys seem to have your shit sorted...
Excellent contents, thanks! Regarding oil changes, I factor in the strain/heat on the engine per hour. If you cruise at cooling speeds, you can double the oil change interval easily. If you load the engine with maximum power at lower speeds (deep sand, uphills) you're better off sticking to what the manufacturer specifies. If you run out of oil filters, change the oil anyway.
Agree on the oil change of every 15hrs is a bit overkill. Todays synthetic is so good it will be fine for that many hours as a dual sport. If your racing I could understand KTMs rationale.
Good video. ivé featured you on my channel. I was considering the 500. And i'll be looking for something smaller down the track. The 790 has been awesome but i feel the weight at times.
Really appreciate your pragmatic approach to the machine. Let’s admit, if you don’t like maintenance you can reduce your machine: KLR, DR, DRZ, CRF… the list continues. All good and all about what you value: speed/performance, vs. Distance/simplicity. Tortoise vs. hard all day. See you out there. Keep motoring whatever y’all decide is your ideal balance. Cheerio from Canada.
It was just a misconception. Or rather mislead by the oil companies that you can't mix mineral oil and fully synthetic oil. You can absolutely mix them and I have done that for decades.
Great info as usual. Though what baffles me, is the 4.3 L/100km in comparison to my Chevy Cruz, which does 5.5 L/100 km - I'll chalk-it up-to fun factor :D
G'day Keith. Question about the bar raisers, what size raisers did you put in and how tall are you? I'm 6'4 and my old 2007 450exc has 40mm extensions and they still weren't enough for me, especially when standing. And also, the bend of the handlebars, are they a low, medium or high bend? I can't quite tell at a glance. Cheers for having a good channel too, really enjoying all your vids 👍
you can drive 5000 miles with no oil change. the 15 hours is for competition use. a normal/recreational driver (even if you are on higher paces) does not use the motor this hard all the time. only if you drvie a lot in sand dust areas you have to clean air filter and change maybe after 2500 miles the oil. if you are making sand races or so then it´s different of course but for normal to higher paces adventure riding not. i have a 22 year old huksy with around 70 000 !! miles without any work to the motor and i change oil 2 a year and i drive mostly daily. motor is still working but it doesn´t like longer distances on street with constant speed. then the motor will die out and i have to restart. don´t knwo what it is, on shorter trips or with changing speeds all the time i don´t have the problem.
50 tooth rear sprocket is actually pretty low gearing for higher speed travel. 18 exc500 and I run 14/45 on longer distances and 13/48 on harder off rd.
Yeah it is... that's what came with it so I hadn't changed it. I now run a 48 as standard on the rear and swap between 13-14 front depending on the ride. Haven't tried 15/48 yet but it would motor...
I'd much rather ride my 501 that ride a bigger cc adv bike on a trip like this. I just think that they are a safer bike to ride being lighter and with much better handling. No offence meant to the lads that ride them. Whatever floats your boat guys ! cheers...
Great discussion Keith. I really like the approach you're taking with the KTM and I'm setting mine up similarly for longer trips. Question though, I've heard a few people tell me the KTM500 won't like the tarmac due to lack of a cush drive. If you've mentioned it, I missed it, but do you feel it's an issue for the countershaft or any other components? Thanks and keep up the great work!!
Yes that comes up a lot. What I've read is that the clutch has rubbers in it, effectively doing the same thing to protect the transmission. True? I don't know - this is just what I've read. Search the forums and you'll see the same. Anyway I have never had any issues, nor missed the cush hub. If you're concerned just buy a set of wheels with the cush hub... there's some pretty good looking wheels out there!
@@keithjob yes it’s does have a cushioned clutch... but I don’t see the harm in getting a cushioned hub too... but it’s not as harsh as the “dirt bikes” on the road with just the clutch rubbers
I live in the UK travel there and also Europe usually solo. My main concern wold be bike security, how do you manage it? I both camp official and otherwise and use budget accomodation so at times the bike would be left on the street etc, I also like to wander around sites of interest I may come across through the day. To have to carry a huge lock and chain around would be a pig, small locks, switch's obviously easily sorted, but I just would not be confident .possibly going hardcore wild camping next to the bike and just riding perhaps works or going 5 star and secure parking, the first not really my style and the second not practical. Only ever had one theft of a dry bag in Switzerland so far. Used a GS 12 a lot and a 640A some too. Enough People do go down the Enduro bike way so it is clearly doable, and others have had problems eg Riemann thanks for going to the effort.
I change mine according to manual if I am riding single track and going hard. If I am doing adventure type riding (not going hard) I do about 1500 miles.
Good job, as someone back/forth between the 690 Enduro and the 500 EXC-F very interesting to me. One question, what did you use to catch the old oil? I assume after emptying the new oil from the 1,5l container you could put it in there and carry it if nowhere to dump it is available, but need something to initially catch the old..
I changed it at a roadside stop. Raided the bin for a container which is easy because it's such a small amount of oil. Then poured old oil in to empty container. 👍
@@keithjob cool, I was thinking a 3-4L heavy Ziploc/Glad bag doubled up to catch it, then pour it back into the 1.5L gas/oil storage bottle when done and pack it out.. whatever works!
Subscribed. Thanks for the video. Currently working through your 500 EXC-F uploads as I am building up my 500 EXC-F for long distance ADV travel for next season - it's winter here in northern states. Curious as to your total weight with gear and luggage. Did you need to change out the fork and shock springs?
What is the engine rebuild interval, and with that is it economically good to take it to such long rides (compared to the generic 650s, T7, etc?) escpecially for easy gravel roads?
Manual says... 135hrs. "Economically good?" It's all relative, and the variables are many. Maybe it's your only bike. Maybe you care more about lightweight ADV. Maybe you factor that into the overall cost of ownership. For true economic benefit, don't ride it at all and you'll never have to rebuild it ;-)
The manual is spec'd for a specific audience that is closer to 50%+ near repetitive WOT. For general adv use you can treat it much more generously. Is it economically good for long gravel rides? Yes - fuel efficiency, laughter, adventure, exploration, freedom. Its economically good for the soul.
Ya great bike. When you buy one, you load it in the back of your truck to take it home… and on the way home, you’ve got to pull over, unload it and change the oil. Keep it. It’s useless.
Don't know. It's a lot of money, especially better in Aus. If there's even a slight chance of actually needing a good headlight, you need to upgrade the stock one, and the xl80 is brilliant.
Ah good question! The plastic guard has a ridge on the inside that fits in the middle of the chain. With a 15T that ridge presses on the chain. I simply got a stanley knife and trimmed the ridge down flush with the rest of the guard.
Semi synthetic and Full synthetic does not make sense much any more. Lots of people use this terms, especially in US, but this does have anything common with original meaning. Just use proper API and JASO spec.
Great vid. Credible content and well produced and presented. Short & sweet. So, in the purchasing dilemma between 690 vs 500, is the 690 service interval the game changer or, the lighter weight of the 500?
The rear section of the frame is really not suitable for that use. It will fail, its just a matter of time. The license plate and the under tray also adds to much weight to the rear fender, as its only in place by two miserable screws treaded to plastic. (Easy fix) I've been to all that. I wish ktm was not so ready to race. And more, ready for offroad use. As we are not all racing pilots. Love the led lights. What are they?
It's dead. Been trying to dry it out for days now but the screen is still unresponsive and half the backlighting has died. Garmin have offered me a discount on a new product, so there may be another review coming ;-)
@@keithjob could be you need to shim the new battery with a washer as well, the little plastic parts that keep the battery in place don't work very good. So a washer against the bottom cap worked for me! (changed battery a couple of times before I realised this)
@@lukeharrison8363 No they are cheap $5 units from eBay. But I got the KTM 500 EXC plugs for easy swap-over. Check this vid: th-cam.com/video/U4X2Mkpyty4/w-d-xo.html
Great channel- I used to ride the 1200 GS and found it was a beast off road. Two years ago made the transition to the 500 and never looked back. Set the bike up very similar to yours. The only time I miss the 1200 is on the days that we ride more than 3 hours of asphalt to the next dint/gravel road, sometimes this is necessary. Other than that the bike is a pure pleasure. It goes anywhere does anything you ask of it plus. The absolute biggest benefit for this 50 year old rider is that the ride is more enjoyable. You are never concerned about picking up the bike when you inevitably go down and you choose your routes for the scenic benefit and not skip beautiful sections because of difficult terrain. On the 500 you enjoy the ride, and remove the constant focus of the" technical aspect" of keeping 600 pounds right side up, on the side of a mountain with baseball size rocks littering the trail and enjoy what you came to do - Ride.
Yes I have done the same trips on both bikes. The 1200 can go there.
Now I get to take the picture of the poor sap that is exhausted, red faced and sitting on the downed bike getting a shot of water before they pick up the beast. Love the videos keep them coming.
Golden comment Tim. 50+ here with similar thoughts, the 500excf is an amazing machine for adv style exploring, the 990A is more for admiring at this stage. Have adventurized the 500 and ridden all over ID/UT/CO on high speed tarmac transitions and slow sketchy single-track. Its overbuilt for what I use it for but a joy to work on, super reliable and always ready to pounce.
Thanks Tim... my sentiments exactly.
Every bike has a compromise, the main thing is you are happy with what you ask of the bike with realistic expectations👍Adventures are different for different people with personal preferences. Thanks for the video
Brown noser much?
Considering a 500 but I have a thought...Compared to a 690 there is about 40kg in it. Changing the 690 exhaust saves you about 6kg. Taking off the passenger pegs and will maybe save you another 1kg. Then fitting the light battery the 500 has saves you another few kg. So let’s say 30kg. . You are adding long range tank and high up on the 500. Now on a long ride you need to take 2l oil. So I would say all in all the 690 would be about 28kg heavier all other things being equal. Now in my mind 28kg is still substantial but the 690 carries the fuel low down. Oil change is a minor issue tbh, but does add weight, packing thoughts, and extra planning to trips. I’m more concerned about valve checks at short intervals, even though that is also relatively minor. My real concern with the 500 is the top end rebuild. That compared to the longevity of the 690 engine and “only” 28kg makes the 690 a better steed for distance and all over use. So this means the off-road one intends to do need to justify the compromises. From the clips at the end of the video I don’t think any of that dirt riding NEEDS a 500. A 690 will do fine. So this is what I’m weighing up right now. It’s really difficult to decide! 😅 Excellent video’s btw - really helps one see the pros and cons of the 500.
That was intresting to read, good points on seeing a weight difference in practice .
One factor might also be the person's weight as a factor.
The weight to power ratio on a ktm500 without a person is higher but when a human weight of 150lb gets added the ktm690 is higher. Start adding a taller person being 180-200lb with gear, food, backpacks , the weight can go up to 220lb very fast. At that point the 690 has a much better weight to power ratio then the 500. Considering the 28kg
Me personally I weight 160lb and for a trip plan on taking 40lb(18kg) of gear(20lb of safety gear on my body 20lb on the bike). Boots, helmet, clothing, food, water, tools, armor, equipment can be heavy.
If you add the 28kg plus 91kg human with gear on a 690, then compare it to a 500. I think the 690 might not feel so bad doing dirt roads.
That being said, the 500 is probably alot more fun to ride
Sounds like a lot of caution, hesitation, and overthinking.
I know this is an old post but you are missing one important point.Its not only the weight,its the balance,ergos and design of two similar looking bikes in the parking lot but in reality 2 completely different bikes .One is a real enduro bike the other can be a very good trail bike.One will never be the other.
@@oscarbear7498 the 2 types of bike feel completely different and handle completely different off road.The 690 also makes its power differently.They are completely different bikes.On a smooth gravel road not much in it,anything else...
I have a fully tricked out crf300l with the proper suspension and a ktm 500.The crf is much better than a 690 off road except power wise on long hills and gravel roads.But the crf is not an enduro bike like the 500 is whatever tricks you do to it
Great video! I take my 500 everywhere too and love it. Did 2 weeks solo in Iceland and crossed the interior end-to-end. Like you, I upgraded the tank but also took a fuel bladder as the place is really remote. The fuel bladder is a great solution because I can stow it away when not using it.
Love your radio solution!
Roll safe!
Cheers
Good Day Keith. I have been following you for several years now, always paying careful attention to your recommendations and reviews. Several years ago I purchased a Honda CRF250L to get back into dirt riding - my Ducati Panigale provides all the road fun I need. Now that I have a few years of dirt riding enjoyment including acquiring some gear and basic items such as Mosco Moto 40's and other items you have discussed and reviewed I have made another decision. Your review of your KTM 500 has been inspiring so as I turn 70 and will retire in the beginning of 2025 I purchased a new Husqvarna 2025 501s to begin my retirement travels. Please keep your reviews and insights coming, they are much appreciated. Safe travels... Bob from Calgary
I would recommend filter socks as well good for longer trips you can just pull them off. Put a pre oiled new one on.
I have two Exc 500' 2021. One enduro and one supermoto. For enduro i change oil every 2000 kms and supermoto every 3000 kms. No problems.
question is how many miles one each bike by now.
@@arnebzumt4492 supermoto have 31.000 km now and offroad about 15.000 km. Never had problem with anyone. Only oil and filter 🤩
Great video! I did 9 days on my 500 last summer camping off the bike and from my experience your advice is spot on.
Great information Keith and can’t wait to get my 500 set up finished!
Good review, I run a WR450 adventure bike, set up well , small ADV bikes are capable machines.
Couple other things I have done for vibrations etc.
Cush hub , excellent, much nicer throughout the drive train.
Add Car sway bar rubbers to multiple places on the frame, where you can get them on.
I use Landcruiser rubbers as the ID is bigger than most cars.
Exhaust, I have experimented with many, basically quieter the better, trying not to loose to much power. I now run a modified ADR muffler, but have a cap I made easy to remove for more bush/ getting on it more.
Most of the time I never remove the cap, I have realised & found the power to be perfect running quiet. Long runs on road it’s much nicer.
Get your screen height set up right, angle, distance from rider.
Big difference over 80km/h
Cheers.
Missed something, ear plugs 👌
Hi Ben, can tou tell us more about cmthe car sway bar rubbers? I assume they are the ones rhwt secure the sway bar to the chassis. Do you just zip tie them here and there on the bikes frame as to add a bit of weight to the frame and cut down the vibrations? Or use them between the frame and engine/other body parts to cut down the transmission of vibrations between various components ?
Thank you !
@@AndreiBanciu howdy mate, I use the type of rubbers that wrap around sway bar Front & rear on cars/SUV. I use Carle ties to hold them onto the frame of the bike...Under the tank main frame back.
Both sides of frame down to foot peg mounts.
Both sides of frame at the front of motor mounts.
I also use large rubber mounts that hold my screen to the handlebars.
All just cable tied to parts of the frame etc, if you are running a cross bar on the handlebars, I have a peace of rubber hose wrapped around the cross bar also.
If your running an Alloy bash plate, use low density foam behind it while mounting the plate, stop the plate singing
@@benlondon8467 awesome info, thank you !
You can do adventure on a pocket bike if you do the right mods and plan your trip right
I have the BRP rubber mounted Scotts and it helps vibrations. If you have a cruise control you can rest your hand as well.
Thanks Keith, very interesting info on your oil changes. I have Husky FE 501 (2015) which has 1.5 litres oil. I have been stretching oil changes out to 20 hours (~600 km). Friends think that's too much, but its good to see that you push your oil changes out even further with no probs. Cheers
Have adventurized my 500EXCF. for extended travel in the west CA/US/MX.
Oil changes every 1500-2500km with easy adv style plodding along riding. Easy to do on the trail if necessary.
The manual probably assumes 50%+ WOT, not applicable to everyone.
I appreciate your thoughts and experience. My two pence worth, I have 2 KTM:
1290SAR
500EXC-F.
I use the 1290 for adventure riding with possible luggage and the 500, is for off road, moto park fun and daily commutes.
I really like both bikes and they both serve different functions, although both are adaptable.
Great series of videos!
Totally love my 2018 500EXC-F. Have 2 other 2 strokes, & the 500 has its place in my stable! Need the right tool for the job, this fits!
I have a 300XC and an EXCF500 and they cover all the bases.
You can also simply ship the oil + filter, etc to one of the places you're going to stay at. Then find any nearby bike/car shop to borrow an oil collecting pan.
yes done that before too. Posted oil, filter, more food, to Birdsville to do an oil change after crossing the Simpson.
Outstanding summary of your setup and experience with the 500 as a lightweight adv bike. I have a 2019 690 that alleviates some of the limitations of the 500 but does sacrifice the off-road capabilities and is 40-45kg heavier.
the 45kg for me was massive, i was so into a 690 after coming from sxf 450 for the last decade and it was to be mine...however i ended up with the 500, 45kg is lot IF YOU GET IN THE SHIT and here in uk you get in the shit fast , it is wet, rocky, sandy, deep mud...if i lived in spain or france i would take 690 no doubt - yeh the 690 meats the road in comparison but my time is not road focus - it is important of course but not the focus
Best real world review yet. Thank you.
Very nice video. I have been traveling for many years with 2x20 plus central 16l bags, I am packing with a tent, sleeping bag and camping equipment. I don't carry inner tubes though - just a patch kit.
Tyre choice impacts the vibes Big Time. I've found the Dunlop 606's work well on tar.
I have 606s and can do 115km per HR unbalanced
exc 450 2018
Have tried everything to reduce vibes for high speed transitions. BRP rubber bar mounts, balanced wheels, decent Dunlop 606's, comfortable grips, seat and adv pegs and you'll reduce 80-90% of what's possible to do. 100mph on knobbies is possible, not quite sane, but possible.
Mako 360 bar mount drastically reduces vibration on my 300 xcw. I’m thinking of a 500 for ADV and I’ll definitely put the Mako on it.
I'll be installing the Mako 360 on my 2017 Husky FE501 this weekend. Hope it works as well at killing the vibes as everyone claims it does! I'm also switching out the ODI Emig grips to ODI Rogues.
Hi thanks for the inspiration.. I am building my new adventure bike on a Husky 450FE 2020.. IMS 17L tank, wheel with kush drive and a true north motos rack..
I have the TNM racks in my FE501. Work awesome with the Mosko Moto 10 and 40 kits👍🏾
Awesome! thanks for taking the time to put this together - very informative and useful information.
Brilliant review. Done a couple 2500km + trips on my five hundy now and it's 👌🏻
Great stuff, enjoy your vids Keith. Cardo is IP rated as waterproof - thats what killed Sena from my shopping list for adventure biking.
Thanks for the video, great stuff, doing a ktm 450 light adventure now.
Nice video. I found inspiration from your videos. I soloed the trans. American trail this last summer. Changed the oil 4 times. I was able to find motorex oil. Which surprised me. The oil drain back home. No debris. Actually looked good. Over 11,000K. 19 days straight. Vibration was the fatiguing. My mistake was not straightening the front rim. Wish I bought a new rim. The best thing I did was buy large rally pegs. So I could stand for long periods of time. Thanks for all the info. Safe travels.
Amazing super fun bike with a few mods it will do anything, and easy to service compared to bigger more complex machines even compared to the 690/701 it is about half the time / effort to take apart things.
Great follow up video. When you figure out the dash issue please post a video on how you resolved the Re-set issue. I’m having the same problem.
Thats a fair call about oil cruising along won't kill it like racing does, and the excs don't hold much less than a 690 in real terms
Another great video. I have run 1500 to 2000 klms between oil drops. But if I have run a hard ride, hot day, tuff climbs and river crossings I'll drop it after 500klms. You soon know when it's had it. You will start to burn oil. Synthetic oil has no shear stability like mineral oil does. It basically turns into thinner... I also tend over fill my motor just give it more life on a long ride. Also what I found good was goin one colder on the plug, especially if I am in hotter climates 30+ degrees. My std plug is an 8, I go upto 9.. you guys seem to have your shit sorted...
Good quality content sir. Love my 500! Best do it all bike!
Can you get a bigger case cover for that bike that'd hold a bit more oil -- that's help, too
Yes there are some options out there... Big Oily and I think Nomad make them. All in the US though so I've never explored the idea much further.
Enjoyed the summary, thank you.
Excellent contents, thanks!
Regarding oil changes, I factor in the strain/heat on the engine per hour. If you cruise at cooling speeds, you can double the oil change interval easily. If you load the engine with maximum power at lower speeds (deep sand, uphills) you're better off sticking to what the manufacturer specifies. If you run out of oil filters, change the oil anyway.
That said, I run a Boyesen high flow water pump, a radiator fan and a Twin Air oil cooler on all my desert bikes.
Agree on the oil change of every 15hrs is a bit overkill. Todays synthetic is so good it will be fine for that many hours as a dual sport. If your racing I could understand KTMs rationale.
Good video. ivé featured you on my channel. I was considering the 500. And i'll be looking for something smaller down the track. The 790 has been awesome but i feel the weight at times.
You would have to be crazy to attempt the single track where I live on that big of a bike. This is the major factor on my choice of a 500
Really appreciate your pragmatic approach to the machine. Let’s admit, if you don’t like maintenance you can reduce your machine: KLR, DR, DRZ, CRF… the list continues. All good and all about what you value: speed/performance, vs. Distance/simplicity. Tortoise vs. hard all day. See you out there. Keep motoring whatever y’all decide is your ideal balance. Cheerio from Canada.
It was just a misconception. Or rather mislead by the oil companies that you can't mix mineral oil and fully synthetic oil. You can absolutely mix them and I have done that for decades.
Great video ! so much information in less than 15min.
Great info as usual.
Though what baffles me, is the 4.3 L/100km in comparison to my Chevy Cruz, which does 5.5 L/100 km - I'll chalk-it up-to fun factor :D
Thanks Keith. Useful video. Happy riding!! Craig - (Christchurch New New Zealand) :-)
Great info. Thank you.
G'day Keith. Question about the bar raisers, what size raisers did you put in and how tall are you? I'm 6'4 and my old 2007 450exc has 40mm extensions and they still weren't enough for me, especially when standing. And also, the bend of the handlebars, are they a low, medium or high bend? I can't quite tell at a glance.
Cheers for having a good channel too, really enjoying all your vids 👍
Intetesting Keith.
So the Husaberg 570 should be similar then, after the appropriate mods. Thats what I'm hoping anyway.
Great vid mate.
you can drive 5000 miles with no oil change. the 15 hours is for competition use. a normal/recreational driver (even if you are on higher paces) does not use the motor this hard all the time. only if you drvie a lot in sand dust areas you have to clean air filter and change maybe after 2500 miles the oil. if you are making sand races or so then it´s different of course but for normal to higher paces adventure riding not. i have a 22 year old huksy with around 70 000 !! miles without any work to the motor and i change oil 2 a year and i drive mostly daily. motor is still working but it doesn´t like longer distances on street with constant speed. then the motor will die out and i have to restart. don´t knwo what it is, on shorter trips or with changing speeds all the time i don´t have the problem.
50 tooth rear sprocket is actually pretty low gearing for higher speed travel. 18 exc500 and I run 14/45 on longer distances and 13/48 on harder off rd.
Yeah it is... that's what came with it so I hadn't changed it. I now run a 48 as standard on the rear and swap between 13-14 front depending on the ride. Haven't tried 15/48 yet but it would motor...
Oil filters: With the oil change, did you also change the filters?
Great Vid. Do you have a list uploaded somewhere of all your mods?
Im just doing adv conversion to 22 500 at the mo
Working on it. Stay tuned.
I'd much rather ride my 501 that ride a bigger cc adv bike on a trip like this. I just think that they are a safer bike to ride being lighter and with much better handling. No offence meant to the lads that ride them. Whatever floats your boat guys ! cheers...
What did you drain the old oil into?
Great discussion Keith. I really like the approach you're taking with the KTM and I'm setting mine up similarly for longer trips. Question though, I've heard a few people tell me the KTM500 won't like the tarmac due to lack of a cush drive. If you've mentioned it, I missed it, but do you feel it's an issue for the countershaft or any other components? Thanks and keep up the great work!!
Yes that comes up a lot. What I've read is that the clutch has rubbers in it, effectively doing the same thing to protect the transmission. True? I don't know - this is just what I've read. Search the forums and you'll see the same. Anyway I have never had any issues, nor missed the cush hub. If you're concerned just buy a set of wheels with the cush hub... there's some pretty good looking wheels out there!
@@keithjob yes it’s does have a cushioned clutch... but I don’t see the harm in getting a cushioned hub too... but it’s not as harsh as the “dirt bikes” on the road with just the clutch rubbers
Per KTM it has a cush clutch and is perfectly suitable for the road.
What are your thoughts on a Rally Tower on your 500?
What do you think about the 350 for these kind of rides? One would trade some power for less vibrations
Also did you do any Engine mods to the bike?
Where is your tent, cooking unit and food?
Great video Kieth!
Question...
Did you also change the filter and clean the screens?
I live in the UK travel there and also Europe usually solo. My main concern wold be bike security, how do you manage it? I both camp official and otherwise and use budget accomodation so at times the bike would be left on the street etc, I also like to wander around sites of interest I may come across through the day. To have to carry a huge lock and chain around would be a pig, small locks, switch's obviously easily sorted, but I just would not be confident .possibly going hardcore wild camping next to the bike and just riding perhaps works or going 5 star and secure parking, the first not really my style and the second not practical. Only ever had one theft of a dry bag in Switzerland so far. Used a GS 12 a lot and a 640A some too. Enough People do go down the Enduro bike way so it is clearly doable, and others have had problems eg Riemann thanks for going to the effort.
Depends on where you are. I use a disc lock to stop opportunistic roll-aways. You will never stop someone who really wants your bike :-(
Same here! I use a disk lock with alarm and sleep next to the bike when comping.
Ahhhh....sophisticated and cultured Europe.. only place in the world you can get robbed at acid point and if you fight back you go to jail
so when have you changed oil usually? not every 15h I guess :-)
I change mine according to manual if I am riding single track and going hard. If I am doing adventure type riding (not going hard) I do about 1500 miles.
Thanks for a nice vid.
Would you say the ktm 690 would be to hard to handle, to big or to heavy for your riding?
Personally I prefer the lighter 500.
Good job, as someone back/forth between the 690 Enduro and the 500 EXC-F very interesting to me. One question, what did you use to catch the old oil? I assume after emptying the new oil from the 1,5l container you could put it in there and carry it if nowhere to dump it is available, but need something to initially catch the old..
I changed it at a roadside stop. Raided the bin for a container which is easy because it's such a small amount of oil. Then poured old oil in to empty container. 👍
@@keithjob cool, I was thinking a 3-4L heavy Ziploc/Glad bag doubled up to catch it, then pour it back into the 1.5L gas/oil storage bottle when done and pack it out.. whatever works!
Subscribed. Thanks for the video. Currently working through your 500 EXC-F uploads as I am building up my 500 EXC-F for long distance ADV travel for next season - it's winter here in northern states.
Curious as to your total weight with gear and luggage. Did you need to change out the fork and shock springs?
Nice vid mate...
What is the engine rebuild interval, and with that is it economically good to take it to such long rides (compared to the generic 650s, T7, etc?) escpecially for easy gravel roads?
Manual says... 135hrs. "Economically good?" It's all relative, and the variables are many. Maybe it's your only bike. Maybe you care more about lightweight ADV. Maybe you factor that into the overall cost of ownership. For true economic benefit, don't ride it at all and you'll never have to rebuild it ;-)
The manual is spec'd for a specific audience that is closer to 50%+ near repetitive WOT. For general adv use you can treat it much more generously. Is it economically good for long gravel rides? Yes - fuel efficiency, laughter, adventure, exploration, freedom. Its economically good for the soul.
Great video
Ya great bike. When you buy one, you load it in the back of your truck to take it home… and on the way home, you’ve got to pull over, unload it and change the oil. Keep it. It’s useless.
Lol 😂
Love the bike! Just got one myself and am debating an xl80 headlight. Would you do it again or spend the money elsewhere?
Don't know. It's a lot of money, especially better in Aus. If there's even a slight chance of actually needing a good headlight, you need to upgrade the stock one, and the xl80 is brilliant.
Oil changes Easy as picking ur nose! If you race every 5 hour if you soft ride easy 20 hour between
The vibrations aren't bothersome?
What front fairing are you using
What have u done with the chain guard/case saver on the front to accept the 15 or just ditched it?
Ah good question! The plastic guard has a ridge on the inside that fits in the middle of the chain. With a 15T that ridge presses on the chain. I simply got a stanley knife and trimmed the ridge down flush with the rest of the guard.
@@keithjob Nice 1 Keith, Thanks for that.
A top idea for a video, thanks! Here it is: th-cam.com/video/HRwuNmN40IY/w-d-xo.html
Semi synthetic and Full synthetic does not make sense much any more. Lots of people use this terms, especially in US, but this does have anything common with original meaning. Just use proper API and JASO spec.
Nice video!
Shame about the 15 hour service interval as that's a deal breaker for me.
Great vid. Credible content and well produced and presented. Short & sweet. So, in the purchasing dilemma between 690 vs 500, is the 690 service interval the game changer or, the lighter weight of the 500?
Yes they are probably the two biggest factors. You need to decide what is more important. Good luck!
The rear section of the frame is really not suitable for that use. It will fail, its just a matter of time.
The license plate and the under tray also adds to much weight to the rear fender, as its only in place by two miserable screws treaded to plastic. (Easy fix)
I've been to all that. I wish ktm was not so ready to race. And more, ready for offroad use. As we are not all racing pilots.
Love the led lights. What are they?
The headlight is Baja XL80. Brilliant!
Here's my vid on them:
th-cam.com/video/oz0VklGJZwI/w-d-xo.html
Great stuff! That tires did you used on that trip?
By the looks of it the Dunlop D606 rear and Pirelli Scorpion Rally front.
Where are your front indicators mounted
LED strip lights across the hand guard braces.
Cush drive?
what are your front indicators ?
they are LED strips.. got them off eBay, pretty cheap.
How's the Montana? Working now? Anything you had to do to it?
It's dead. Been trying to dry it out for days now but the screen is still unresponsive and half the backlighting has died. Garmin have offered me a discount on a new product, so there may be another review coming ;-)
@@keithjob They (Garmin) are good that way. I also repaired the screen on one. You can find them on Ebay. Was it the 650 or 680?
You can mix semi and full synthetic oil you cant mix mineral oil with them .
Semi-synthetic is just full-synthetic mixed with mineral oil. There is no problem with mixing them all.
What are grip puppies?
Foam grips that go over your normal grips. th-cam.com/video/r49vlBdTuZw/w-d-xo.html
My 16 500 had that dash problem keith was just a flat battery
Thanks Sam, I will change the battery.
@@keithjob could be you need to shim the new battery with a washer as well, the little plastic parts that keep the battery in place don't work very good. So a washer against the bottom cap worked for me! (changed battery a couple of times before I realised this)
We’re did u get ur tail tidy from. I can’t find one in aus
Hi Luke, assume you're talking about the licence plate holder? I made it. Here's the vid... th-cam.com/video/PXtJw8Qy_Q0/w-d-xo.html
The integrated blinkers ? Is that a part of the tail tidy ?
@@lukeharrison8363 No they are cheap $5 units from eBay. But I got the KTM 500 EXC plugs for easy swap-over. Check this vid: th-cam.com/video/U4X2Mkpyty4/w-d-xo.html
He’s not racing the bike , so I don’t think even if you didn’t do a oil change would be a big deal , great video tho
👌👌
I think it's more important to change your thongs every few days! 🤣
👌🏻
Do you ever get Drunk and run over a Roo on that thing ?
Or a wallabee
Sell it as a six days version...
Six days on a non-SixDays bike? How dare you....