Never had a problem even at 25 to 30 below. I would sometimes drive for an hour to get to the staging area.Any tricks on how to protect a battery from freezing if electric start sled is being transported long distances in icy weather on a trailer or sled deck? Is the only option remove the battery?
Pretty darn cold i say, we would take the e-start off on sleds/quads when we sent truckloads to northern manitoba or NWT or Iqaluit they did not want those. I have seen sleds sit overnight in -30+ and start for those folks even if it was a few pulls. Lead Acid by far, good for -70 if you can ride in that then your better than most lol!I feel if a etec won't start its to cold to go riding. How cold does it have to be for a sled not to start?
As everyone else has said, a fully charged battery in good condition isn't going to let you down. It's the batteries left unmaintained for a summer or two that are more likely to become sulfated and lose their charge and freeze prematurely.Thanks for the responses. Reason I ask is I want to head Manitoba way in January. Likely to be -20. Last time I did this the sled battery was dead when I got there. Not sure how old that battery was as I bought that sled used. Now with a new sled and new battery, wondering if I would have the same issue.
U go riding in -40 sounds crazy