Ya, he’s telling you your sled is gonna break down and giving you parts to fix it.My dealer handed me 4 spare plugs after I paid for my snowcheck. Thats what a good dealer does for you.
Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ya, he’s telling you your sled is gonna break down and giving you parts to fix it.My dealer handed me 4 spare plugs after I paid for my snowcheck. Thats what a good dealer does for you.
Very true, but I think that's more of a poor reflection on Polaris.Ya, he’s telling your sled is gonna break down and giving you parts to fix it.
Agree, I couldn’t figure out a way to write that. Good dealer, bad PolarisVery true, but I think that's more of a poor reflection on Polaris.
It’s funny, this dealer pushes 3rd party extended warranty’s HARD. Before getting your sled they escort you back to the warranty guy who tries to be your pal, explains all the packages to you, and then attempts to make you feel stupid for denying. Warranty is only as good as the dealer. I have been buying brand new sleds since 2013 and this is my first warranty claim… I’ve always just fixed myself, because I don’t have much faith in any of the local guys.My response would be "Wear item?! It's got 25 frickin miles on it, if you call that normal wear, I'm getting a lawyer and making you buy it back!" This kind of thing is why I say warranties aren't all they're cracked up to be, and service departments are fly-by-night mechanics with a nicer front desk area. Of the two dealers nearest me, one had to buy me a new clutch after screwing up the rebuild, and then the other I had to pester just to get an estimate on another clutch that blew a roller - that turned out to be about the same as a new clutch, plus what should have been a five minute lookover and discussion with a tech cost me an hour of shop time. Unfortunately, there are hardly any independent guys who work on sleds near me. I guess I should take the hint and buy the tools to service my own clutches.
Anyway, this is definitely stealership clownery, and if it were me, I would be aggressive with them. Unfortunately, this seems to be where things are going. Many components are increasingly lower quality, and things are being put together by less and less dedicated workers, then sold by people who just want the sale and hope to never see your face again unless it's to buy another. Any dealer I'd consider doing business with would be entirely apologetic over the lost riding time, and that it's not running right; they'd keep on it until it was fixed, and you'd get it back completely prepped, greased, and with a new belt and set of plugs. Blowing belts and fowling plugs are things well-maintained sleds rarely do, and yet this dealer wasted your time with a non-fix "fix" and is trying to blow smoke on "wear" items where it should be too embarrassing to even suggest.
I think I'd avoid them on principle - not knowing, of course, how much more hassle the next dealer is to get to. If they keep acting this way, I'd definitely go up the chain and tell them "how will I never buy a Polaris again: let me count the ways." I still think Polaris designs and engineers some good products, but I have no desire to ever spend new sled money on them if they're going to put out half-baked things like the P-22, then have dealers act like you should feel privileged just to have such a "great" sled sit in your garage. Sure, there's only so much they can do, but these people sound too stupid to still be in business - not the people you want "fixing" your sled...
EXACTLY. I can tell the service kid does not understand… he thinks I’m mad about a spark plug.A good dealer would have made this right. This isn't about the plugs, it's about a brand new sled that's never run right.
I agree, service fail!
Oh I did notice it gets hot real fast on the way in… I guess I started with low expectations there.At least you didn’t get to ride it long enough to notice the overheating problems they have.
You’ve clearly never been around farmersThe fact of the matter is nobody wants anybody to make money anymore. Everyone whines and cries because they have been on a nipple their whole life. I have no idea how a dealer deals with the average snowmobiler. Out of all the things I have been involved with I would say snowmobilers take the cake and let me tell you Ferrari owners set the bar extremely high on retardedness. These idiots haggle over $500 on price. Drive 3 states over to save $500 then cry about having to pay $100 because you are too lazy, dumb, privileged, or whatever excuse you want to put for not changing the plugs. Don't worry I'm sure you'll be able to buy a snowmobile from China off Amazon in no time so you can be happy.
I agree to some degree… would be a good way for them to bring the cost down, but without them having ANY accountability for the sleds they build I bet be we would see quality and reliability continue to slide.Manufactures should sell sleds without warranty, and offer a warranty package for purchase.