No I'm Chris, only one first name for me.^^^^ you are Dense lol, Curtis....
Ricki Bobbi... Keith Curtis
I agree that suspension is key and Curtis has the best tuners in the business that I can see watching the sleds go through the bumps however like I said last year and the year before and the year before that Keith Curtis is in a totally different postal code to all the other riders at this point in time. He is just that good just like Morgan was when he was in snocross. However after years a kid named Tucker Hibbert came on the scene and was equally as good and then Blair was no longer dominate. There are some other riders that are making in roads on Curtis now but need more seasoning. Polaris’s Justin Thomas, Blaine Matthews made great strides this year and the newer guy from Skidoo in Mason Rutledge. At some point Keith will falter like all the greats do and someone else will take the reigns. Like Skidoos dominance right now in snocross, Polaris puts a lot of effort into hill climb and it pays off. We are lucky to see Curtis at his best right now. He has it all going and can’t be touched for now.A hillclimb like this is won by good tuners. Dialed in suspension is a must, and perfect clutching for the constant on off throttle. Stick a good rider on a dialed sled and a fast run is going to happen. A lot of the riders having issues were getting tossed all over the place, their suspension just wasn't set up right.
A hillclimb like this is won by good tuners. Dialed in suspension is a must, and perfect clutching for the constant on off throttle. Stick a good rider on a dialed sled and a fast run is going to happen. A lot of the riders having issues were getting tossed all over the place, their suspension just wasn't set up right.
I agree that suspension is key and Curtis has the best tuners in the business that I can see watching the sleds go through the bumps however like I said last year and the year before and the year before that Keith Curtis is in a totally different postal code to all the other riders at this point in time. He is just that good just like Morgan was when he was in snocross. However after years a kid named Tucker Hibbert came on the scene and was equally as good and then Blair was no longer dominate. There are some other riders that are making in roads on Curtis now but need more seasoning. Polaris’s Justin Thomas, Blaine Matthews made great strides this year and the newer guy from Skidoo in Mason Rutledge. At some point Keith will falter like all the greats do and someone else will take the reigns. Like Skidoos dominance right now in snocross, Polaris puts a lot of effort into hill climb and it pays off. We are lucky to see Curtis at his best right now. He has it all going and can’t be touched for now.
Another thing I noticed was some sleds in the lower sections sounded tapped out. Geared to low maybe ??? Keiths sled was visibly faster, maybe slightly taller gearing?
When I did tech for hillclimb/snow drags it was like this.It would be awesome to see these sled builds broken down and what parts are used in each class.
What's needed to remain "Stock" vs "improved" and "mod" etc...
1000 class... What motor you runnin? 850 max effort?
It would be awesome to see these sled builds broken down and what parts are used in each class.
What's needed to remain "Stock" vs "improved" and "mod" etc...
1000 class... What motor you runnin? 850 max effort?
I don't know why this class still exists in the stock, and improved stock categories1000 class... What motor you runnin? 850 max effort?
I missed this in my post.stock is stock and you can use parts available from the manufacturer....so you could throw freeride shocks and stance on a summit etc... but nothing more, nothing aftermarket.
1000 stock you would run the 850 stock. Most guys just run the same sled they use in 900 stock. The class was created when there was 1000cc twins.
improved you can modify the cylinders, porting etc bore etc... NO TURBOS, aftermarket shocks and clutching allowed
modified is basically no rules total custom builds allowed turbos superchargers etc
RMSHA follows ISR hillclimb rules
International Snowmobile Racing, Inc.
www.isrracing.org
Impossible to enforce. Fuel blending has also always been an issue. Stock is limited to 91 octane. There isn't much HP left on the table for 91 octane but if blended there is definite gains availableDefinitely some interesting games being played , by some . one is the rule on the stock class sleds is that are allowed to alter the stock programming in the ecu. Kind of like putting a a tune in a duramax. It probably would be a bitch to enforce a rule that would eliminate that but for the guys riding any brand that don’t have the ability to alter the ecu , it’s pretty tough to get that level of performance. Especially in the turbos.