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There’s a massive shift happening right now in the motorcycle industry that’s changing the entire landscape of a market that’s grown complacent with the ‘bigger is better’ school of thought. Smaller, more approachable street bikes, with a healthy dose of youthful design like scramblers, sport-standards and cafe racers continue to see a steady rise in popularity with each big manufacturer offering more options each year. Now it’s the off-road adventure riding world’s turn to get the attention and bikes like the Husqvarna 701 Enduro are perfectly poised to lead the pack in the changing of the guard.
The off-road situation is a little different than on-road motorcycles. Bikes like the gargantuan BMW R 1200 GS, KTM 1290 Super Adventure and Honda Africa Twin are the poster children for ADV motorcycles. But, the big bikes are still the headlining acts that stole the majority of attention of their respective manufacturers as far as performance and development went. If you wanted something smaller, the middleweight class didn’t offer much; go any smaller than that and you’re looking at dirt bikes. That’s starting to change. ADV riders are becoming wise to the weight advantages of the Enduro class motorcycle, which can still carry gear, and when taken it off road don’t make you wrestle with 700lbs worth of motorcycle.
Enduro or middleweight adventure bikes, when properly outfitted, are not only thousands of dollars more affordable than the typical liter-plus ADVs, but can be more capable, less stressful and wildly more entertaining off-road. I’m here to say: the 2018 Husqvarna 701 Enduro, with a set of saddlebags, is a dream come true for any minimalist overlander.
The Good: The engine is the headlining act with the 2018 Husqvarna 701 Enduro. Though it is based on the same bike as the KTM 690 Enduro R, the Husqvarna get its own, all-new, refined and slightly larger 693cc engine. It was hard to find a situation where power wasn’t readily available. On the highway, out to Conserve the Ride in Woodward, Pennsylvania, even in sixth gear, doing 60-70mph, the single-cylinder still found enough shove to get me past slower traffic. Then once off-road, chugging along in first gear, weaving around and navigating oil-pan-killing rocks, barely on-throttle, there was no hesitation. The sweeping, open gravel fire roads and single track trails are what this bike was built for — it was completely in its element powering out of tight turns and floating the front wheel.
