Here it is in a nut shell, all sleds that are on the market today have their individual issues some can be addressed early and some are sneaky. That being said, I have seen all different years and brands grenade their mills, a 2-stroke motor by design is a time bomb if that is a problem for you then find a different pastime. If you own a sled, pwc, dirt bike or quad be prepared for greasy hands and grief plus an angry wallet. Now, let's diagnose 95% of motor failures.
1. Have you let your sled properly break in?
2. Every time you go out and start it up do you let it warm up to 100-110 degrees?
3. Are you running the correct oil?
4. Are you running high enough octane to stop detonation?
5. Are you running a plug with the proper heat range?
6. Have you modified your engine in anyway beyond oem spec?
7. Are you not varying your speed across the band?
8. Are you pinning the throttle for extended periods of time?
If any of these describe you than there is a chance that the problem is not the sled it most likely is the operator. These machines have limitations. Not to say that the companys building them have it all perfect, they don't. News flash that's why improvements are always on the way.
1. Have you let your sled properly break in?
2. Every time you go out and start it up do you let it warm up to 100-110 degrees?
3. Are you running the correct oil?
4. Are you running high enough octane to stop detonation?
5. Are you running a plug with the proper heat range?
6. Have you modified your engine in anyway beyond oem spec?
7. Are you not varying your speed across the band?
8. Are you pinning the throttle for extended periods of time?
If any of these describe you than there is a chance that the problem is not the sled it most likely is the operator. These machines have limitations. Not to say that the companys building them have it all perfect, they don't. News flash that's why improvements are always on the way.
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