Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
#4
Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
I would go with the P700 for its reliability and performance. The Rincon is equiped with a very low tech engine comparable to ATVs of the 1970's with a single cylinder cam in block engine equiped with push rods. The P700 has a twin cylinder with over head cams which is very similar to exotic Italian Ducati motorcycle engines. Throttle response is equal and quick on the P700. On the Rincon throttle response is equivalent to its engines technology which is slow and smooth. The P700 is equiped with dual ventiled cross drilled disque brakes in front and 7 sealed disques brake system in the rear that works with clutch which is very performant. The Rincon is equiped with two ventiled disque brakes in front and......drum brakes in the back which are the cheapest and worst braking system an ATV can have. As for the transmissions, the P700 is equiped with a simple belt drive system that is easy and cheap to maintain. The Rincon is equiped with a transmission that can't be maintain (except for oil change) or fixed, if there is a problem with it, it has to be completly changed. So far my dealer which is also a Honda dealer, has changed three transmissions on the Rincons and two on Rancher400 which are equiped with the same automatic transmission. One Rancher owner had no guarantee left, thus after installing a new transmission and... 3000CAN$, he had his transmission problem fixed. A belt on a P700 is about 100$. The dealer said the Honda Foreman of the 90's used to be bullet proof, but so far the Rincon is on a bad start. As for after market performance mods, except for a dynojet kit and an exhaust system, nothing is available for the Rincon. For the P700, you can have everything you want (cams, clutch kits, exhausts and headers,suspension upgraded, air ram system),even an aftermarket Dyna FS CDI at the end of the month will be available.
#5
Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
Oh! I forgot, if you drive a little rough, you will be better off with a straight rear axle like on the P700. It is strong and can take a lots of abuse (also excellent for taking a curve or inclined terrain because the rear axle is rigid, thus, you don't get soft suspension tipping over feeling), as for an independent rear suspension equiped quads like the Rincon, it will sure give you a smoother ride going in a straight line, but their rear axles in the back are smaller and more fragile to wheelspin, and are known to break easier than solid straight rear axles.
#6
Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
Originally posted by: LittleBoy
I would go with the P700 for its reliability and performance. The Rincon is equiped with a very low tech engine comparable to ATVs of the 1970's with a single cylinder cam in block engine equiped with push rods. The P700 has a twin cylinder with over head cams which is very similar to exotic Italian Ducati motorcycle engines. Throttle response is equal and quick on the P700. On the Rincon throttle response is equivalent to its engines technology which is slow and smooth. The P700 is equiped with dual ventiled cross drilled disque brakes in front and 7 sealed disques brake system that works with clutch which is very performant. The Rincon is equiped with two ventiled disque brakes in front and......drum brakes in the back which are the cheapest and worst braking system an ATV can have. As for the transmissions, the P700 is equiped with a simple belt drive system that is easy and cheap to maintain. The Rincon is equiped with a transmission that can't be maintain (except for oil change) or fixed, if there is a problem with it, it has to be completly changed. So far my dealer which is also a Honda dealer, has changed three transmissions on the Rincons and two on Rancher400 which are equiped with the same automatic transmission. One Rancher owner had no guarantee left, thus after installing a new transmission and... 3000CAN$, he had his transmission problem fixed. A belt on a P700 is about 100$. The dealer said the Honda Foreman of the 90's used to be bullet proof, but so far the Rincon is on a bad start. As for after market performance mods, except for a dynojet kit and an exhaust system, nothing is available for the Rincon. For the P700, you can have everything you want (cams, clutch kits, exhausts and headers,suspension upgraded, air ram system),even an aftermarket Dyna FS CDI at the end of the month will be available.
I would go with the P700 for its reliability and performance. The Rincon is equiped with a very low tech engine comparable to ATVs of the 1970's with a single cylinder cam in block engine equiped with push rods. The P700 has a twin cylinder with over head cams which is very similar to exotic Italian Ducati motorcycle engines. Throttle response is equal and quick on the P700. On the Rincon throttle response is equivalent to its engines technology which is slow and smooth. The P700 is equiped with dual ventiled cross drilled disque brakes in front and 7 sealed disques brake system that works with clutch which is very performant. The Rincon is equiped with two ventiled disque brakes in front and......drum brakes in the back which are the cheapest and worst braking system an ATV can have. As for the transmissions, the P700 is equiped with a simple belt drive system that is easy and cheap to maintain. The Rincon is equiped with a transmission that can't be maintain (except for oil change) or fixed, if there is a problem with it, it has to be completly changed. So far my dealer which is also a Honda dealer, has changed three transmissions on the Rincons and two on Rancher400 which are equiped with the same automatic transmission. One Rancher owner had no guarantee left, thus after installing a new transmission and... 3000CAN$, he had his transmission problem fixed. A belt on a P700 is about 100$. The dealer said the Honda Foreman of the 90's used to be bullet proof, but so far the Rincon is on a bad start. As for after market performance mods, except for a dynojet kit and an exhaust system, nothing is available for the Rincon. For the P700, you can have everything you want (cams, clutch kits, exhausts and headers,suspension upgraded, air ram system),even an aftermarket Dyna FS CDI at the end of the month will be available.
#7
Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
Hondarider86,
If you re-read my post. I was talking about the Rincon's been single cylindered, OHV with push rod which are important elements of the engine that are also found on engines of the 1970's. And Maybe the Rincon's OHV was suppose to have more low end torque because of its single cylinder OHV engine but against the V-Twin engine on the Prairie 650 and 700 it is not the case. Just look right at the take off, the Prairie is a real holeshot, can't say the same about the Rincon. The Rincon's OHV engine has even an smooth powerband for a single cylinder, but it is been compared to a 90° V-Twin engine that is renouned to be the smoothest engine in the ATV market which has a lots less vibration than the single cylindered engine. Why would the Ducati and Kawasaki V-twin be so different in your opinion, if the Ducati efi and CDI are compatible with the Kawasaki V-Twin (Yes, some modified Kawasaki Prairie 700s are running with Ducati's efi and CDI)? Sorry, about mistaking the Rincon's braking system, it is even worst than I though. Has you know the front end of the ATV need more braking power and Honda has putten drum brakes in front which are the worst in braking performance instead have disque brakes (they might wear faster then disque brakes but at least they brake better. I don't plan on saving brake wear, I go for safety first, and that is probably why High Lifter Company is now offering aftermarket disque brakes for the Rincon owners concerned with safety!)Maybe the Ranchers and the Rincon's transmission are a little different, but they are around here both renound to have unreliable transmission. You their transmission can be fixed, but not at the dealer, they change them and sent the broken one back to Honda who will find cheap labors to re-built them and sent them back to someone else. And yes a belt can break, but it is a lots cheaper to fix[img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif[/img]!!! And talking about real facts, we can't talk about the Rincon's rear axles reliability yet, but on other IRS quads like the Polaris Sportmans and Grizzly are known to have more rear axle changes than the Prairie 650s and 700s, and not because of the leverage factor but because the articulated joints of the IRS axle that are attached the wheel and to the differential are more fragile to WHEELSPIN than a straight solid rear axle. So, here is the info I got down on my stupid stuff. Thanks again for the help.
If you re-read my post. I was talking about the Rincon's been single cylindered, OHV with push rod which are important elements of the engine that are also found on engines of the 1970's. And Maybe the Rincon's OHV was suppose to have more low end torque because of its single cylinder OHV engine but against the V-Twin engine on the Prairie 650 and 700 it is not the case. Just look right at the take off, the Prairie is a real holeshot, can't say the same about the Rincon. The Rincon's OHV engine has even an smooth powerband for a single cylinder, but it is been compared to a 90° V-Twin engine that is renouned to be the smoothest engine in the ATV market which has a lots less vibration than the single cylindered engine. Why would the Ducati and Kawasaki V-twin be so different in your opinion, if the Ducati efi and CDI are compatible with the Kawasaki V-Twin (Yes, some modified Kawasaki Prairie 700s are running with Ducati's efi and CDI)? Sorry, about mistaking the Rincon's braking system, it is even worst than I though. Has you know the front end of the ATV need more braking power and Honda has putten drum brakes in front which are the worst in braking performance instead have disque brakes (they might wear faster then disque brakes but at least they brake better. I don't plan on saving brake wear, I go for safety first, and that is probably why High Lifter Company is now offering aftermarket disque brakes for the Rincon owners concerned with safety!)Maybe the Ranchers and the Rincon's transmission are a little different, but they are around here both renound to have unreliable transmission. You their transmission can be fixed, but not at the dealer, they change them and sent the broken one back to Honda who will find cheap labors to re-built them and sent them back to someone else. And yes a belt can break, but it is a lots cheaper to fix[img]i/expressions/face-icon-small-smile.gif[/img]!!! And talking about real facts, we can't talk about the Rincon's rear axles reliability yet, but on other IRS quads like the Polaris Sportmans and Grizzly are known to have more rear axle changes than the Prairie 650s and 700s, and not because of the leverage factor but because the articulated joints of the IRS axle that are attached the wheel and to the differential are more fragile to WHEELSPIN than a straight solid rear axle. So, here is the info I got down on my stupid stuff. Thanks again for the help.
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#10
Honda Rincon vs. Kawa P-700
I read more post's on here about Kawasaki's belt problems than ANY other model in production to date!!! All these sensors going bad have to reset this or reset that! It may be less maintenance on the Kawi but just go browse in the Kawi forum and look at all the belt problems you see on the Kawi, since you mentioned the Grizz and Polaris, they have 10x's less belt issues as does the prairie!!! The capabilites to GO anywhere was the deciding factors when I bought my grizz not how "FAST" I got there, cuz I can make it their not to far at ALL behind that Prairie, it being a V-twin I would think would DESTROY the Grizz, hmmm, doesnt by much!!!