@Red Leader - I love seeing the Huskies. Way back in the day, I had an early 70's 250CR that the previous owner had converted to a WR. Did a ton of desert riding/racing and then spent $$$ to convert it back to a CR. I was working in a HD/Yamaha/Honda shop at the time and one of my vendors was looking for a WR tank. We traded so I got the small tank for free but had to buy all the transmission stuff. Motocrossed that version for a few years before selling it.
I loved that machine. Came with the big binder(s) full of service info and even a full physical conditioning program - Husqvarna officially approved.
They are my absolute favorite. I grew up watching On Any Sunday, and even though it wasn't my generation, I have a complete fondness for the era, and the ironclad warriors that rode these things. My dad one day came home with a '76 WR 250, and then we picked up a '76 CR 250 as a project for me, sort of got rebuilt, and tooled around on that thing for a good while. When they moved, they ended up getting rid of them, and if I had even a 1/4 of the sense I do now, I would have absolutely told him, 'I'LL TAKE THEM'...but live and learn!
I was going to pick up a local to me '72 WR, and drove the hour and a half to go look at it, with cash in my pocket, but the guy couldn't get it running even after the ad said 'runs great', and would not budge at all on price, so I walked away from it on principle. Probably would have been easy to get it running again, clean the carb, etc., but I said no.
Not a day goes by and I notice several ads by the same seller of some motorcycles in Missouri, who had these two listed. All in all, I was in them for less than the cost of that single bike, including the transport from MO to CO. However, these ones are in far rougher shape - both near engine teardowns, and that is my big hangup right now. I so badly want to be 'that guy' to rebuild the engines, but without the tools, time, or technical experience w/ these specific engines...it is hard. I don't want these projects to get away from me, and that is honestly some of the motivation behind getting the garage in order, so I can actually tackle projects like this.