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NETRA event list is huge this season.
A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself. - John Stuart Mill
nice, a dude was talking to me about this at mototown and really pushing that I should try one out...might be fun but I'm one of those pusses that doesn't want to trash the 'mx' bike![]()
LRRS #399
MX #505
Give it a try and you might just get hooked.
The winter HS requires studs.
MX guys do well, but the race is a couple of hours long. I think it beats going around in the circle though, which I also like, just not as much.
I would like to do the snow run Enduro again. I broke my neck there last year and I am almost healed up enough. It was my 1st Enduro.
If I get my tires worked out I want to go.
The enduro seems like much less stress IMO. The trails are not as beat as you only pass over them once. I liked the feeling of going somewhere. I had no idea of time keeping and just rode for the ride of it. Before my crash I was having the best ride of my life.
I think I may be a regular on the Turkey Run Series.
100 plus miles of awsome, legal for the day trails.
OT
It pays to play.
Ride fast,
You will get farther before it is over!
is that the difference with enduro and hare scramble series, one long loop vs having laps? I think I will definitely try to make one in decent weather.
Glad to hear you are healing up.
LRRS #399
MX #505
I'm excited to try some of these dates. Just have to make it to ones that are within a couple of hours of VT.![]()
I thought I was the only one that broke they're neck in the NETRA enduro's last year. I went down at the Tri-state enduro. I certainly know what you had to deal with. I returned to riding in Sept, but just got comfortable to the point I don't think about it while riding.
Anyone thats on the fence about coming and riding this hare scramble, they do have a sportsman class. Its an option if you want to feel it out, but not want to much pressure.
Enduro can be one big loop or multi loop, most are 60+ miles. Riders are sent out in rows four at a time, every minute. You are suppose to ride the course and stay ontime, based on the set course speed, say 18 or 24 mph. Easier said than done, even the fastest riders can't zero the whole course. Hidden checkpoints are spread out along the course, as you pass through checkworkers mark a card placed on your bike, if you arrive ONTIME you would score a ZERO. If you come in late, say 5 minutes, score is a 5, its better to be late than early. If you arrive early, called a BURN, 1 minute early adds 2 to your score, 2 minutes early get you a 7. Lowest score wins! Terrain is mixed, everything from pavement to dirt roads, and the nastiest mud and hill climbs they can find.
Kevin
wow, these look pretty cool
what sort of bike would be best suited for these runs if one were to start out?
Depends on the rider, as far as experiance and skill. Generally, something you feel comfortable riding for 2hrs, in mud and rocks. Ktm woods bikes,KDX 200's are very capable with some porting, I wouldn't recomend a 250 two stroke mx bike to anyone starting out though. Alot of guys look down at the KDX's. You would be surprised how fast you can go 90 minutes into a race on a bike like that, when the whole time your trying to go as fast as you possibly can, as opposed to having to ride conservative on something that has more power than you need. Tim
My buddy has 2 KTM's an 08 sxf and 07 xcwf, both are 4 strokes though.
I'd second that. The KDX 200/220's are relatively cheap, reliable, easy to start and simply awesome for any NETRA event. They can take a beating and keep on ticking, and they can be made to perform reasonably well with a few mods.
I would actually like to buy another one.
Todd Dombrowski? For awhile he was like the Jeff Freddette of NETRA with his kdx's. I'm curious how my bike choice this year works out, I broke my own rules. I raced a Ktm 200 last year, great bike and still have it. You can spend the day trying just trying to keep the throttle pegged. I picked up a Husky 610 awhile back(the one that hasn't run in 2 months now) and decided I needed another big fourstroke. I picked up a 09 KX450f a month ago and have been getting it set for the woods. I'm, taking the 450 to the hare scramble next weekend, but have a feeling I'm going to start the season on the 200 and switch over to the 450 when I'm stronger. Tim
Last edited by netra709; 01-11-09 at 05:40 PM.
Yes, For you to ride an enduro, plan on headlight, tailight(battery powered are acceptable), spark arrester, street plates and insurance. It seems like alot to race enduros, but it really is worth it. For a hare scramble, you just need to pass the sound test.
Yes
If you don't mind doing a little work to get set up, your riding is very limited with no street plate. All you can do is ride in closed courses,if get plates you can also do Turkey Runs. And getting a plate for a KTM is nothing, and thats in MA, nevermind NH and VT are super easy.
Kevin
My stock 09 KX450, never would have passed. By far the loudest bike I have had in my 26yrs of riding. I put a FMF Q4 on this week and it quieted it down nicely. Like R7 said, the 250 two stroke shouldn't have a problem, aslong as the silencer packing is good.
cool thanks guys
LRRS #399
MX #505