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I just remembered one more really important thing this morning.
Job #1: Do no harm!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Please just don't ruin it. You have created the most awesome sled I've ever ridden. Your motto of keep it light keep it simple make it work has given us an awesome sled. Please don't ruin a good thing.
We saw Polaris ruin a good thing in 2005. We saw ski-doo ruin a good thing in 2008. We saw cat ruin a good thing in 2012. The #1 job first and foremost for Polaris right now is to not ruin a good thing. These sleds are so awesome as-is right now that I hope they are really really sure that any changes they make are an improvement.
A heated brake lever would be nice indeed. Also, a better brake lever that more resembles the levers offered on high end mountain bikes these days. Every Polaris pro rider tells us to ride with one finger on the brake and then Polaris sends us a sled that is really really not conducive to doing so. The left hand knoweth not what the right hand sayeth.
Short seat (height wise). Hop overs are one move that is way harder on a new sled than a 90s sled. They’re even worse with low bars. I feel like I’m doing a handstand every time I do a hop over, and the feeling is unnerving and perverse. Make it go away.
listening?
Still love this video... the guys who built this sled were so excited and proud of it- and rightfully so.
Been fun to watch a sled that seemed perfect in 2011 evolve into what we have today.
I’m just going to say not everyone thinks of “hopovers” as just stepping over the seat.
The actual maneuver (changing direction from sidehill one way to sidehill the other way Uphill in around 4-6’ of space) uses a lot of features that the 90’s sleds don’t have.
What I meant was when you’re sidehilling one way and you need to cut uphill and immediately sidehill back the other way, you jump from your left foot on the right running board to your right foot on the left running board (or vice versa) as you make the turn. The high seat gets in the way and forces you to jump really high in order to do it. 90s sleds had low seats, so you didn’t have to jump as high. Definitely more commitment required to pull it off on new sleds.
I would like to see polaris and all the manufacturers redo their fuel tanks and make the oil tank centered up and part of the fuel tank. Polaris could relocate the 3 switches and have the oil filler right above the fuel cap. Weight centered instead of off to one side or the other.