Lund
Active VIP Member
I remember the day's owning a liquid cooled sled was the coolest thing, it attracted the crowd, if you had one it mean't you were the power king on snow even though 50-60hp is all it meant. Compared to most free air and fanners of 25-40hp that was a huge increase. My first liquid cooled was a Rupp Nytro, 500 liquid twin, 55-60hp.
The race to 100hp
I remember the day i swung my leg over my very first 100+hp sled. The 97 Yamaha Mountain Max 700 3 cylinder. Holy cow was that exciting for me a sled with over 100hp(112hp stock I believe) With some pipes and work that engine was able to make 130+hp.
The race to have a sled capable of breaking the 100 was the thing then, guys would modify with pipes and jetting and so on to get as close as possible. My previous 92 Yamaha Exciter 570 pumped around 80hp, I had pipes, reeds and head mods for a claimed extra 15hp but compared to the Max, it didn't compare, plus reliability went in the dumpster. So a sled capable of 130hp wow who needs that, way more then I will ever need, plus suspensions now were coming into the picture more with Cats A-arm system claiming better handling over everyone else trailing arm. So the focus was changing some.
Today the average rider is ripping around on 150-160+hp, no experienced needed. Back then the sound of 80-100hp alone scared potential new comers....hahaha, how times have changed and the sport.
The race to 100hp
I remember the day i swung my leg over my very first 100+hp sled. The 97 Yamaha Mountain Max 700 3 cylinder. Holy cow was that exciting for me a sled with over 100hp(112hp stock I believe) With some pipes and work that engine was able to make 130+hp.
The race to have a sled capable of breaking the 100 was the thing then, guys would modify with pipes and jetting and so on to get as close as possible. My previous 92 Yamaha Exciter 570 pumped around 80hp, I had pipes, reeds and head mods for a claimed extra 15hp but compared to the Max, it didn't compare, plus reliability went in the dumpster. So a sled capable of 130hp wow who needs that, way more then I will ever need, plus suspensions now were coming into the picture more with Cats A-arm system claiming better handling over everyone else trailing arm. So the focus was changing some.
Today the average rider is ripping around on 150-160+hp, no experienced needed. Back then the sound of 80-100hp alone scared potential new comers....hahaha, how times have changed and the sport.