What's the Best Work Bike?
#3
I've been working the devil out of an Arctic Cat 500i for the past year, hauling trees off of fencerows, and towing trailers loaded with hardwood. It's a pulling fool, heavy weight ,torquey engine, and manual transmission. If you don't need the Cat's high ground clearance and independent rear suspension, an even better puller is the Polaris 6x6. I got the Cat instead, because my farm is rough as a cob in spots, and I wanted the better rough ground capability.
-John
-John
#4
I would prefer a manual for pulling/plowing, because I don't trust belt drives and work would tnd to stress them more than just riding. That being the case I would look at the Vinson manual, 450 Foreman, Eiger.
#7
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#9
If brand new is not a probblem I would go with a Polaris 400 Explorer with a lowend pipe and clutch kit. 2 strokes kick butt in pulling.
#10
If you can afford a 650 or one of the other truck sized quads, get one. I personally looked at them and for me, they were too big for my farm use. If I could get one of those big boys someplace, then I could probably get my truck there to do the pulling. Plus, I couldnt see spending 6-7K on a Quad. I would recommend a Suzuki King Quad. Thats what I decided on, and have been very happy with it. It's only 300 cc's, but it has a high, low, and superlow gear range, with selectable 2 or 4 wheel drive, and is one of the few quads other than the 600+ cc land yachts with a locking front differential. Top speed is not too fast (40-45), but it gets you there fast enough. Low end power will surprise you for a 300 cc quad. Its feels like you could pull a house off the foundation. I swear, if I could line the front tire up right, it would climb a tree in low or super low range. And last weekend, I found it will pull a prairie 650 out of the mud at only 1/4 throttle in low . 2002 was the last year they made them, but dealers do still have some(new), and they are cutting good deals. Mine was $4750 out the door.


