Blue RZR's Crew Spy Picture!
#21
#22
That's my thought too. My son wants a RZR. If he gets the RZR we could go as a family or invite a friend with a friend too. My wife does not like how a quad is driven. I wonder if she'd like driving a RZR?
#23
#24
My Polaris (Both of the Popo's I've owned in fact) has been way the hell more reliable than the complete and total POS Jeep Commander I'm stuck with. Seen the dealership 14 times since 2007. Fourteen!!!! Chrysler Corp ought to be ashamed of the crap they churn out nowadays. Total junk. 43000 miles and it has rust bubbles above the widshield too. I take my 1997 S-10 with 170000 miles on it over the Jeep I can't trust for toy hauling and such.
Dodge57hemi, no offense meant towards you, but I am disgusted with the company you wotk for... They make Polaris's customer service look amazing by comparison.
Dodge57hemi, no offense meant towards you, but I am disgusted with the company you wotk for... They make Polaris's customer service look amazing by comparison.
#25
My Polaris (Both of the Popo's I've owned in fact) has been way the hell more reliable than the complete and total POS Jeep Commander I'm stuck with. Seen the dealership 14 times since 2007. Fourteen!!!! Chrysler Corp ought to be ashamed of the crap they churn out nowadays. Total junk. 43000 miles and it has rust bubbles above the widshield too. I take my 1997 S-10 with 170000 miles on it over the Jeep I can't trust for toy hauling and such.
Dodge57hemi, no offense meant towards you, but I am disgusted with the company you wotk for... They make Polaris's customer service look amazing by comparison.
Dodge57hemi, no offense meant towards you, but I am disgusted with the company you wotk for... They make Polaris's customer service look amazing by comparison.
#26
Yes, high center issues. It was merely a observation on the gaudy wheelbase. Simply by looking at the pic one can see the potential to high center. "Creative wheeling"?? You can do that all you want, high center happens and will certainly happen more often with a long wheel base, just a fact. Simply a observation, one I thought was quite obvious.
#27
Aside from ECU's (2) it's never been the same thing. Sensors, electrical issues, leaking sunroof, dead instrument panel, dead climate control lights, Parking assist, if left on, kills the battery and all the controllers (there are several), so it's been left off for about six months. Its a shame too because the truck rides great, is very comfortable, the engine and tranny are stout, and commandtrac is amazing in snow or mud. But I can't trust it longer than a ride into town. The truck blue books at just over 15, but no dealer will come anywhere near it, and won't come to within 3K of what I owe on it. One dealer fixed it once for free, but only if I never brought it back there ever again. The other dealer won't return calls and tries to blame me for all the problems. The problems have cropped up over a long enough span and a long enough mileage span that lemon laws don't help... not in NY at least.
I wish International Harvester still made light trucks. I've had two, a 65 and a 75, each a one ton, and they were awesome off road trucks. Dana 60 front and Dana 70 rear axles on the 65(304ci V8 and .488 gears), and Dana 60's all around on the 75(345ci V8 and .411's). The 65 had a 10000lb Ramsey PTO driven winch. It operated thru the tranny. That truck weighed 7400lbs with a half tank of gas. No power steering, drum brakes all around, and a detroit locker in the rear. But a hydraulic clutch! The thing was a real moneymaker in the winter, pulling people out of ditches and such. Those were tough assed trucks. Old Power Wagons were hardcore too.
I wish International Harvester still made light trucks. I've had two, a 65 and a 75, each a one ton, and they were awesome off road trucks. Dana 60 front and Dana 70 rear axles on the 65(304ci V8 and .488 gears), and Dana 60's all around on the 75(345ci V8 and .411's). The 65 had a 10000lb Ramsey PTO driven winch. It operated thru the tranny. That truck weighed 7400lbs with a half tank of gas. No power steering, drum brakes all around, and a detroit locker in the rear. But a hydraulic clutch! The thing was a real moneymaker in the winter, pulling people out of ditches and such. Those were tough assed trucks. Old Power Wagons were hardcore too.
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