KIWI RIDER 12 2018 VOL.2 | Page 66

KTM has delivered a light-weight, fast and very capable machine that works well in New Zealand conditions TM has had the 300cc two-stroke market sewn up for many years now, primarily because it was the main manufacturer making them. Sure, Spanish firm GasGas has made decent 300s too, but not in the same kind of numbers as KTM, and not with such a broad and loyal following. The Japanese have never made them. This is not to say they’re not a great bike, quite to the contrary – many great riders believe they’re the ultimate two-stroke engine size for general off-road work. Just why the Japanese manufacturers have never made a 300 isn’t completely clear, but I think it’s likely to be because of no specific race class for that engine capacity, and politics. KTM clearly thought there was additional potential in the 300cc two-stroke market just based on its sales of the excellent 300 EXC model alone. So a few years back KTM introduced a 300cc cross-country machine, 66 KIWI RIDER the 300XC. Basically, the Austrian team removed the lights and odometer from the EXC, swapped the rear suspension from PDS to a rising-rate linkage system and gave it a power delivery that was a little sharper and harder, more motocross-like. Yes, there are a few other subtle changes to the XC, like a mildly slower steering head angle and 5mm longer forks, but with that done, KTM delivered a light-weight, fun, fast and very capable machine that works well in New Zealand conditions. For 2019 the KTM 300XC is only subtly tweaked compared to last year; focusing on mass centralisation with revised radiator positioning, and body work changes that leave the XC with a lighter feel, if not much of an actual reduction in weight. The cooling system has also been improved. Where the enduro-specific 300EXC gained fuel injection last year – KTM’s Transfer Port Injection system – the XC model still retains