I think that KLX 300 is eventually what I'm going to get to downsize in the garage.
I have a Honda Pacific Coast 800, that's been sitting for 10 yrs since I shattered my wrist. Right after the injury, we had an unusually cold / wet winter, and the carbs ended up gumming-up.
She'll start.. but the moment you try to crack the throttle she wants to die, so if I remember right in my initial research, that means like the Pilot Jet? or Main Jet? needs the varnish removed in there.
The PC800 was "The Sensible Dad Bike" I switched over to from the Yamaha FZ1 I was riding last before that. Purposefully, to slow me down, once I now had a child. That boy in 17yo now.
Since I don't really have a need of riding anymore, was thinking I might pickup a KLX300 in place of the PC800. Regain a lot of space in my garage.
Also I figure that way, if I end up gifting it to my son at some point for his first vehicle... it won't be a 450. It'll be something more tame, since he has very little dirt-riding time under his belt, because he was just too damn whiny for me to deal with when he was little, when I'd be taking him out with the XR50. And I just never got around to coming back to the dirt-riding thing with him. Because that whiny-ness just turned me off to it soo bad. But then I had several other issues happen. One was re-aggravating hurting my lower-back after C19's high-fever and insane inflammation.
Pain mgmt Doc says I've got the spine of a 70yo (I'm 55yo atm). I'm sure all the BMX/MTB/DirtBike/Sportbike crashes and working-out/lifting and re-exacerbating of those old injuries from C19 definitely played into all this.
Let me ask you this about the KLX300... is the rear end as softly sprung as I think it probably will is?
I'm generally in the range of 205-225Lbs before gear. And MOST of the time, for DualSports, I've had to get a stiffer after-market spring so I wouldn't have to do the ghetto-y trick with the preload tensioner for temporarily over-coming a too-soft of a spring rate.
It ends up making it very pogo-y over smaller bumps when you crank-up the preload tensioner to get that too soft of a spring into the harder part of the compression rate on the spring, it'll effect things such as braking-bumps leading into a corner, for example.
Do you find that the springs are overly cushy to begin with?