What do you think of the Polaris Diesel
#21
What do you think of the Polaris Diesel
Brother - in - law actually HAD a diesel for a while. While it was amazinly easy on fuel, and didn't cause him any mechanical troubles, he wound up selling it after about a year of owning it (for quite a lot less than he paid for it) because it wa so s-l-o-w. He summed it up this way...although it could drag a cow all over the farm, it couldn't outrun her. You basically had to just wear her down, and drag her back LOL. He said the only thing he misses about it, was the ability to siphon a gallon of fuel out of his tractor, and drive his ATV home on it (he is notorious for driving to some far off field without checking the fuel in his ATV, but that is a story for another time).
#22
#25
What do you think of the Polaris Diesel
Northstar, they are SLOW!
Getting off your wife's HO, and onto the diesel would be like getting off of a Mustang, and onto a Clydesdale that refuses to go faster than walk. It will work the Mustang into the ground pulling a plow, but unless you like to take gentle, liesurely rides, it will be too slow for you.
However, it gets double, or better fuel mileage. If you have diesel equipment, and want fuel compatability, it is probably OK. Construction guys love 'em because they can run ALL day on a tank of fuel, as well as haul and tow great loads. Most construction sites have a 20 or 25 MPH limit, so being slow isn't such a detrement for them. Most other people don't like them, too slow, heavy, and loud.
It can be hard to start in the cold, too.
Getting off your wife's HO, and onto the diesel would be like getting off of a Mustang, and onto a Clydesdale that refuses to go faster than walk. It will work the Mustang into the ground pulling a plow, but unless you like to take gentle, liesurely rides, it will be too slow for you.
However, it gets double, or better fuel mileage. If you have diesel equipment, and want fuel compatability, it is probably OK. Construction guys love 'em because they can run ALL day on a tank of fuel, as well as haul and tow great loads. Most construction sites have a 20 or 25 MPH limit, so being slow isn't such a detrement for them. Most other people don't like them, too slow, heavy, and loud.
It can be hard to start in the cold, too.
#26
What do you think of the Polaris Diesel
ok so you don't need to rush to a gas station, hell you can just tie the pump to the back of your diesel and pull the pump around and you wouldn't even know it's being dragged around because the diesel is so loud that you wouldn't hear the slack from the gas attenant. But on a serious note I wish the diesel had a standard tranny like a tractor.
#27
#28