N
Exellent yes my guess as well , I've encountered that on other off road machines who's brands i will not mention here lol, but they were the snow going type so different animal fouling plugs when not yet warm , and thank you, I've wheeled under the machine once with my crawler but haven't obviously drained anything, waiting for Amazon to bring me my kit.. surprising , oil kit ,crush washers, two oil filters, air filter, two plugs and diff fluid , $149 .. not bad for stuff that says honda all over itWelcome from the once great state of Colorado.
I'd blame it on short trips, never getting a chance to warm up and burn off crankcase moisture/fuel. Once started, it's a good idea to leave them running until they reach operating temp or risk fouling plugs.
If you aren't familiar with the Pioneer 1000 - the engine oil has two drain plugs about 4" apart, one is horizontal and pointing to the left side. The other, and a little rearward, is pointing almost straight down. You'll want your extension leaned a little bit to the right side so you don't round off the drain plug - no, you're not crazy. (at least on a Talon, I'm assuming the Pioneer are the same)
The sub trans is forward of those two and also points to the left side.
This is a Talon skid, but the drains are in the same place (very similar engines) -
View attachment 419632