First time riding with a Rekluse clutch today. (Walker Valley, of course). I'd have to say there may have been a bit too many variables involved for me to make a clear decision but I maybe leaning in the direction of getting one.
1) First time riding in over 6 months. That in itself will make me ride crappier.
2) New AlpineStars Tech 8 MX boats; stiff as can be, can't feel the shifter at all.
3) Didn't ride my own bike today; rode two very different Husabergs instead; an '01 470 and an '08 550. Both pretty different from each other, but VERY different from my Gas Gas 450; which is the only bike I've riden since my Honda CBX in 1985! (Oh yeah, I forgot I road nhtcrhis165's xr 250 around the block once last summer)
4) Knobby rear tire on the 01 470. Hate it. Since I started riding again a year and a half ago I've only known the Pirelli MT43 trials tire. Felt like I was riding on marbles with that knobby.
5) DId I mention both Husabergs were equipped with Rekluse clutchs? 01 450 still had the RH footbrake. 08 550 had LH rear hand brake in place of clutch lever and foot brake had been removed.
Concerns: It was weird enough riding for the first time in 6 months, and weird riding unfamiliar bikes, and then switching them up (so I don't get used to anything.) let alone trying to find brake levers in panic spots of wet and muddy Walker valley.
I started out on the 08 because the 01 had its issues. It is a weird feeling bike compared to my GasGas and I was struggling trying to get used to not having a rear brake lever, even though I don't actually use the rear brake all that much. After a short time, I switched to the 01 because it had a foot brake.
On the '01, I flew down a steep wet brick paver trail a lot faster than i wanted because the bike freewheeled instead of compression brakeing because the adjustment was wrong. And I found out that one of the
issues on the 01 is that the back brake had a tendency to lock up , especially with the knobby.

Note to Jason: Adjust that fahkin compression brake!
Back on the 08 for the rest of the day.
The GasGas wheelies pretty easily; I sit toward the back a little and grab a handle of throttle and lean back. The 08 Husaberg would wheelie with the slightest twist of the wrist, wether or not I was sitting back. I was amazed. On the WV fs roads, I would be sitting all the way up against the gas tank coming out of corners and the bike would still wheelie leffortlessly with me leaning forward (this one has the trials tire). But even at the end of the day, I found I was still reaching with my left foot to touch the rear brake as is my habit before wheeling, and of course it wasn't there.
The Good:
There are a few spots at Walker that have steep rocky rooty step-ups that can be a real challenge. Sometimes i will clean them easily, but by no means am I able to be consistant on them. As tired as I was, on a strange bike, I rode them easier with the Husaberg/Rekluse set up than ever before. That fact is what really stands out for me.
The majority of drops on my GasGas come at Walker Valley because of it's typical tight steep rocky sections requiring careful manuevers where I stall the bike and can't stop it from falling over because the terrain is sloping away. I didn't drop either Husaberg all day beacuse neither one of them stalled on me with the Rekluse.
Overall, I am amazed at the low end grunt of the Husaberg and think the Rekluse clutch system really compliments that particular part of the powerband well.