Thanks much for all you input in this and other threads. At this point I'm going to give it more time to win me over.Maybe you love it and wouldn't trade it for anything. But either way I think give it a shot.
Thanks much for all you input in this and other threads. At this point I'm going to give it more time to win me over.Maybe you love it and wouldn't trade it for anything. But either way I think give it a shot.
I've been riding Rhinos since '03 and currently own four of them (three 700s and one 450). Over the years I've had a great relationship with Yamaha and was in-fact featured on their magazine cover that they publish in Japan (I did not make the English print because I didn't have a picture in which I was wearing a helmet):I went from a RZR, to a P500, to a Wolverine, now to the P1000.
Any idea how the rear auto level shocks work, and will the system still work if I replace the shocks with reservoir type?The Wolverine will have much better seats, storage, and suspension.
Agreed!The Yamaha has the best belt drive
Is this an option/upgrade for the Pioneer?Nice bucket seats
My RZR literally spent more time in the shop than it ever did on the trail. Never again.[/quote]Polaris has way too many design and assembly problems
Thanks much for your input; this is indeed my plan.Trust me when I say run it for a few hundred miles and don't baby the motor. The machine becomes you.
Thank you; I couldn't imagine living anywhere else.First I would just like to say WOW! Those views are remarkable!
I think this is the biggest challenge I'll face: retraining myself.Learning how to operate an industry first transmission is something else
Should I be concerned about damage from my son spinning up a rooster tail in turf mode? He only did it once and after I got his attention, he will never do it again.I use 2wd when aggressive driving now. The turf mode doesn't turn it into a true open diff. Its really a semi open diff.
10-4.I've been riding Rhinos since '03 and currently own four of them (three 700s and one 450). Over the years I've had a great relationship with Yamaha and was in-fact featured on their magazine cover that they publish in Japan (I did not make the English print because I didn't have a picture in which I was wearing a helmet):
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Those trail pictures were also taken at the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range just south of Billings. I also currently own a '14 Teryx4 that I'm very happy with and was a part of the Teryx project as well from the initial release in '07 (as an '08). I owned a RZR for a very short time but it spent more time in the shop than it did on the trail. I've done consulting work with every OEM except for Honda and Can Am and have seen almost every design available today when it was still in prototype phase (and directly contributed to make some designs better than they were) so I'm not at all new to SxSs.
...but this Pioneer is a different beast. I've offered critiques, reviews and feedback on so many designs over the years that one of my motivating factors in buying the Pioneer was just the fact that it was so different. I genuinely want to embrace this beast but the transmission is going to have to win me over. I do look forward to giving it the opportunity to wear in and do whatever it needs to do to smooth out.
Thanks much for your input. I am curious what you didn't like about the Wolverine? I was pumped by the prototypes but as with so many other designs, the designers create an incredible machine and then the lawyers and the bean-counters neuter it before it ever sees production. I thought certain that I would own a Wolverine after production but what we got was essentially a less workable Rhino. I just couldn't see giving up my '13 SE Rhino for essentially the same machine without a dump bed that was even smaller and I couldn't see what I could do in the Wolverine that I couldn't do in my Rhino.
...that said, should they stuff a v-twin in the Wolverine, that will be enough for me to buy another machine. I don't understand why Yamaha is clinging to the single cylinder 700 when the market trend is clearly moving toward more power. The Rhino lawsuits cost Yamaha dearly but they never lost a suit and established precedent so we were all surprised when they stuck with the 700 class.
There's hydraulic chambers in the shock itself so you will loose that if you swap them out.Thanks much for your input; this is indeed my plan.
I don't think it will damage it. I just noticed the clicking when roosting the tires. Didn't sound good. Similar to the clutch in a cordless drill.Should I be concerned about damage from my son spinning up a rooster tail in turf mode? He only did it once and after I got his attention, he will never do it again.
you can use turf and sport at the same time learn how to us your machineFirst of all , if he was in low driving that fast, that's just plain lame. He should have used high and turf mode. Nothing ion that trail would require any more.
I had responded earlier that I spent the majority of my riding time in turf mode. After reading that your machine was making some bad noises when pushing it hard and spinning your wheels, I figured I would see for myself. Last night, I did a bit of spinning out in turf mode. I was in dirt but I had no unusual or disconcerting sounds from the drive train. For the record, I did this both straight line and while cornering. That said, I feel that my machine is broken in at 400 or so miles. Just saying as a point of reference.Should I be concerned about damage from my son spinning up a rooster tail in turf mode? He only did it once and after I got his attention, he will never do it again.
I've been a competitive rock crawler for over 20+ years (started with Jeeps, then ATVs, then SxSs). I've never won anything worthy of mention, but I've always been competitive and ridden to win. Other than the old days when automatics were rare in Jeeps, I don't know of anyone utilizing a manual transmission when rock crawling, certainly nobody that wins. The overwhelming majority of serious competitors (particularly those who win) are running CVT (in SxSs) or Turbo 350/400 (or current production automatics in Jeeps). Third place finisher in King of the Hammers was a completely stock Kawasaki Teryx. Whereas you see it silly to run an automatic in technical areas, I wouldn't ever choose a manual. The closest I've seen is a pneumatic shifter on an automatic for an on-demand downshift which is indeed similar to what the Honda paddles offer.talking about not finding which gear it needs in auto for technical stuff is kind of a silly argument. you have an on the fly automatic manual transmission. if your going through a technical..... why.... in the world... are you in automatic?
Thanks much for the advice; I'll evaluate again after my oil changes and more mileage.changing the oil turned the slightly quieter clicks and pops from shifting literally into non existant things of the past.
I just took my Honda out for a quick drive across town (we can license for street use, here) and noticed something I've never before noticed. There is a distinct "click" a split-second prior to each gear shift. I'm confident it's some type of shift solenoid (I don't really understand yet how the DCT operates) but I don't know if I should be able to hear it? Just odd that I never before noticed it.
Thanks,
I've been a competitive rock crawler for over 20+ years (started with Jeeps, then ATVs, then SxSs). I've never won anything worthy of mention, but I've always been competitive and ridden to win. Other than the old days when automatics were rare in Jeeps, I don't know of anyone utilizing a manual transmission when rock crawling, certainly nobody that wins. The overwhelming majority of serious competitors (particularly those who win) are running CVT (in SxSs) or Turbo 350/400 (or current production automatics in Jeeps). Third place finisher in King of the Hammers was a completely stock Kawasaki Teryx. Whereas you see it silly to run an automatic in technical areas, I wouldn't ever choose a manual. The closest I've seen is a pneumatic shifter on an automatic for an on-demand downshift which is indeed similar to what the Honda paddles offer.
Thanks much for the advice; I'll evaluate again after my oil changes and more mileage.
I was trying to replicate it and couldn't, so Im assumingit was one of 2 things, either it was the wood on the bridge I was red lined in 3rd or 4th gear not moving because of the spinning or it could of been not all the way in turf. I'm assuming it was the first because I've done some nice burn outs and drifting yesterday and no noise and I was in turf.I had responded earlier that I spent the majority of my riding time in turf mode. After reading that your machine was making some bad noises when pushing it hard and spinning your wheels, I figured I would see for myself. Last night, I did a bit of spinning out in turf mode. I was in dirt but I had no unusual or disconcerting sounds from the drive train. For the record, I did this both straight line and while cornering. That said, I feel that my machine is broken in at 400 or so miles. Just saying as a point of reference.
Thanks much! I never noticed it before and now I can't help but notice it...even anticipate it.That is a normal sound. I know what sound you're talking about. You hear the solenoid and then the gear shifts.
Now that sounds like a good ride!we get through nasty stuff to go shoot stuff.
Agreed fully. I was unintentionally misleading in an earlier response. I don't compete anymore as I haven't the time for it and ride strictly for recreation and hunting now. Depending on where we are riding, we will be at least 50+ miles away from where we left the trucks.reliability is much more important than time or however those comp are judged.
Now that sounds like a good ride!
Agreed fully. I was unintentionally misleading in an earlier response. I don't compete anymore as I haven't the time for it and ride strictly for recreation and hunting now. Depending on where we are riding, we will be at least 50+ miles away from where we left the trucks.