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Thread: Maggot snowmobile thread

  1. #2451
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
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    Shuswap Highlands
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    4,719

    Maggot snowmobile thread

    Quote Originally Posted by RockinB View Post
    Late to the game with this but I ordered one of these up for my sled and couldn't be happier. Thanks for the heads up for whoever posted it. I live south of the border but picked it up on a trip north. We looked into shipping and it was a bit steep.

    Dustin is the man. He went way out of his way to drop it off at the hotel I would be staying at. He was super good to work with and I can't say enough good about the transaction.

    The rack looks similar to a CFR rack and the bungee system works great. I finally got around to testing everything properly last weekend and was pleased with it. I have used a Mopros rack previously and the bungee system on this rack is every bit as quick, if not quicker to secure things. Less moving parts that are much cheaper to replace if needed compared to the ladder strap setups.

    Just wanted to give a heads up about them in case anyone is in the market.
    Very happy with mine as well. Had to shave a bit off the inside of the mounts to fit a pair of skis together but otherwise it works great. Even fits a set of misery slippers (one each side) for when the activity requires it. Bungees lose a bit of elasticity below -15C, but that is to be expected.

  2. #2452
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Vancouver Island
    Posts
    2,128
    Have a hut trip coming up at the end of next month. Sledding in. Ordered some Cfr tunnel stiffeners (their “blades”) and a hitch bumper to tow in a toboggan. Figured the stiffeners will be a good idea with a rack in general and now for towing as well. A few questions:

    Can I install the stiffeners outside and still fit a rear bumper? Would you install using the rivets provided or SS bolts?

    What do people use for toboggan runners? Need to install something on mine and I’ve read about people using strips of fibreglass or similar or aluminum runners (presumably just 1”x1”angle bolted to the bottom and tapered at the front to promote running... cause they’re runners, ya know?). Any recommendations/experiences that people can lay on me?
    "...if you're not doing a double flip cork something, skiing spines in Haines, or doing double flip cork somethings off spines in Haines, you're pretty much just gaping."

  3. #2453
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Vernon BC
    Posts
    1,765

    Maggot snowmobile thread

    Stiffeners can go inside or out side the tunnel. The rivets are pretty bomb proof and slick. No need to take them off once they are on, so I wouldn't worry about bolts.

    Toboggan runners are not really necessary, with the exception of protecting the toboggan from gravel / paved surfaces. Most track just fine without, unless u don't have a solid hitch.
    "Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto

  4. #2454
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    not here, kansas
    Posts
    306
    Recommendation bump,

    What are most people using for two up skiing off groomed trails?

    Plan A. Ride one pull one on groomed road. Then, Side by side sled to ski zone, or monkey on my back style, going to try both. Not sure what will be best. Norona seems to side by side, others monkey style? Or I forget what they called it.
    Falling feels like flying........for a little while.

  5. #2455
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
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    5,013
    Quote Originally Posted by bobbuilds View Post
    Recommendation bump,

    What are most people using for two up skiing off groomed trails?

    Plan A. Ride one pull one on groomed road. Then, Side by side sled to ski zone, or monkey on my back style, going to try both. Not sure what will be best. Norona seems to side by side, others monkey style? Or I forget what they called it.
    Canadian - side by side

    Alaskan - cozy up against the bars

    American - solo. Nobody wants to get on your loud ass Artic Cat anyway

    If you are evenly weighted Canadian is best. If one weighs a lot more than the other than Alaskan works better for the long haul out to your spot.

  6. #2456
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Vernon BC
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    1,765
    'Canadian' style is the most effective for anything besides a groomed trail.

    Unless you will be regularly accessing via a groomed trail, two up seat sleds are not the answer. Towing someone in is extremely tiresome for the guy getting pulled
    "Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto

  7. #2457
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Posts
    1,213
    Quote Originally Posted by eldereldo View Post
    I ride An AC and it if you get a 2014 plus it is probably the most reliable sled you can own. The 800 engine had been bullet proof since the M8 days, but the 2012 and 2013 has clutch issues which were fixed with 2014. There was an update available so if the machine you are looking at has had it done it would be fine. As far as riding goes the 2016+ has a new front end and skid that makes a lot of difference in sidehilling and not trenching. The other thing Cats need is for the stock skis to be replaced, they are to narrow and trail oriented.

    Final, while I think my Cat is great, if you don’t have the mechanical ability or space to work on your own sled, you might want to get a Skidoo as there is a dealer in Pemberton and another in Squamish, no other dealers in the S2S so you are looking at driving to Vancouver for service, or using an independent shop. Probably 90% of the sleds here are doos for that reason. Although their riders will tell you it is because the sled is the best.

    To find the best sled deals look in Alberta kijjii
    Thanks man
    Yeah lots of Skidoo's here. One of my buddies was on an cat. He had all his work done at Revolution and was happy with all the work.
    Im planning a trip out to castle mountain so ill start trawling ab kijiji too

  8. #2458
    Join Date
    Jan 2013
    Posts
    266
    Quote Originally Posted by cmcrawfo View Post
    'Canadian' style is the most effective for anything besides a groomed trail.

    Unless you will be regularly accessing via a groomed trail, two up seat sleds are not the answer. Towing someone in is extremely tiresome for the guy getting pulled
    Is that just because it puts the weight on the machine where it best floats?

  9. #2459
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    Oct 2008
    Location
    Vernon BC
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    Quote Originally Posted by bbergey View Post
    Is that just because it puts the weight on the machine where it best floats?
    Dam it, I am skier! Not a scientist.
    "Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto

  10. #2460
    Join Date
    Jan 2013
    Posts
    266
    Quote Originally Posted by cmcrawfo View Post
    Dam it, I am skier! Not a scientist.
    I’ll see if Elon Musk knows

  11. #2461
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    993
    Get on, hold on, hit the go button. You'll figure out what works.

    Sent from my SM-G930W8 using Tapatalk

  12. #2462
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    give'er eh!
    Posts
    2,244
    This thread should be renamed “snowmobiles used to ski for newbies”

  13. #2463
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    993
    Quote Originally Posted by teamdirt View Post
    This thread should be renamed “snowmobiles used to ski for newbies”
    Should just default answers to "read back through from start to finish" all answers area there.

    Sent from my SM-G930W8 using Tapatalk

  14. #2464
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    not here, kansas
    Posts
    306
    Thanks. Going out this weekend, we’ll see how it goes. We’ve got a trail sled, demoing a mountain sled, and some good snow. Looks like mountain sleds are what I’m seeing people on, 800’s I’m definitely new to sled skiing.
    Falling feels like flying........for a little while.

  15. #2465
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    vernon
    Posts
    3,037
    Quote Originally Posted by RockinB View Post
    Late to the game with this but I ordered one of these up for my sled and couldn't be happier. Thanks for the heads up for whoever posted it. I live south of the border but picked it up on a trip north. We looked into shipping and it was a bit steep.

    Dustin is the man. He went way out of his way to drop it off at the hotel I would be staying at. He was super good to work with and I can't say enough good about the transaction.

    The rack looks similar to a CFR rack and the bungee system works great. I finally got around to testing everything properly last weekend and was pleased with it. I have used a Mopros rack previously and the bungee system on this rack is every bit as quick, if not quicker to secure things. Less moving parts that are much cheaper to replace if needed compared to the ladder strap setups.

    Just wanted to give a heads up about them in case anyone is in the market.
    Totally off topic but he just built some skookum rails for me in my new house. Couldn't be happier. It was his first go at rails as well, kid is solid!

    Click image for larger version. 

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    www.skevikskis.com Check em out!

  16. #2466
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Vernon BC
    Posts
    1,765
    Dam. Those are some beefy rails. Looks like 200+ ? What ya got, like 7" stair on that? Sick brah.
    "Its not the arrow, its the Indian" - M.Pinto

  17. #2467
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    in your second home, doing heroin
    Posts
    14,674
    That's on air bnb and open to snowboarders right? They look solid enough.
    Besides the comet that killed the dinosaurs nothing has destroyed a species faster than entitled white people.-ajp

  18. #2468
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Whistler
    Posts
    1,038


    15cm reported, love it

  19. #2469
    Join Date
    Jan 2013
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    266
    Quote Originally Posted by JimLad View Post


    15cm reported, love it
    Deeeep!

  20. #2470
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Creekside
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    1,655
    Quote Originally Posted by bbergey View Post
    Is that just because it puts the weight on the machine where it best floats?
    First if you are riding anything other than a smooth trail, anyone sitting down will have their teeth rattled, or knocked out, second, riding with one person standing on each board allows you to shift your weight on the sled to sidehill or deal with off camber situations.

    Sometimes one person sitting in front and holding the center of the bars, and the other person steering by standing behind and reaching over is all you can do, we rode a tight winding trail this last weekend and anything else would have wiped you off the side of the sled, as it was one of the boards didnt make it through unscathed and had a binding almost ripped off.

  21. #2471
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Summit County
    Posts
    332
    Quote Originally Posted by eldereldo View Post
    First if you are riding anything other than a smooth trail, anyone sitting down will have their teeth rattled, or knocked out, second, riding with one person standing on each board allows you to shift your weight on the sled to sidehill or deal with off camber situations.

    Sometimes one person sitting in front and holding the center of the bars, and the other person steering by standing behind and reaching over is all you can do, we rode a tight winding trail this last weekend and anything else would have wiped you off the side of the sled, as it was one of the boards didnt make it through unscathed and had a binding almost ripped off.
    I don't know - I'm a complete newb when it comes to both sledding and sled/skiing, but with only 3 days of experience on my new-to-me 2010 Yami supercharged Nytro, my first sled/ski trip wasnt that bad.

    I made two ~7 mile one-way trips, each with a knuckle dragger in tow and a passenger with skis 'Alaska' style + gear / beer / bags on hard packed / wind buffed / sastrugi / powder drifts and they were all fine. One of the boarders event pretended he was Mikaela on a slalom course most of the way in. Both passengers were comfortable...all loved not having to skin 7 miles!

    While the Nytro isnt a mountain sled per se, i dont think the extra ~100lbs or a supercharger made a difference or made it more comfortable or easier.

    The only issue was the gear bags bungied to the rear gear rack seemed to raise the center of gravity, so on off camber trail sections, i thought we would tip. I likely need to do some fine tuning of the suspension pressures or just shut up and learn to ride.

    Lessons learned -
    get a real ski rack (both skiers kept skis between my and their lap)
    get hand/wind deflectors! It was somewhere around -15 degrees at the trailhead.
    We used a water ski rope/handle, but next time will add a beefy mountain bike tube to soak up some of the jerking.

    If this is as bad as it gets, i really overthought the difficulty of sled assisted 'hut trips'.

  22. #2472
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Summit County
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  23. #2473
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    993
    Awesome glad you had fun. Climbing harness for towing with a simple loop on the rope for a quick let go is nice too.

    Went out today and the snow was too nice so we just rooped all day.

    Sent from my SM-G930W8 using Tapatalk

  24. #2474
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Summit County
    Posts
    332
    Thanks - Will try that harness idea. Makes more sense. Your day looks way more fun! Where is that?

  25. #2475
    Join Date
    Jan 2013
    Posts
    266
    Quote Originally Posted by eldereldo View Post
    First if you are riding anything other than a smooth trail, anyone sitting down will have their teeth rattled, or knocked out, second, riding with one person standing on each board allows you to shift your weight on the sled to sidehill or deal with off camber situations.

    Sometimes one person sitting in front and holding the center of the bars, and the other person steering by standing behind and reaching over is all you can do, we rode a tight winding trail this last weekend and anything else would have wiped you off the side of the sled, as it was one of the boards didnt make it through unscathed and had a binding almost ripped off.
    Sidehilling - I see how that would work well side by side!

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