lund said:
X2, i was going to mention the exact thing, yes the Nytro is heavy, yes the new 2strokes are light easy to ride. But i DON't trail ride, i'm a noose bleed crowd kinda guy. At elevation ie. 6,000ft and up a boosted Nytro don't feel heavy with 240hp pushing them and will pound a light weight 2stroke to the ground all day long, plus go home on its own power.
The issue being made imo as i said in my previous post, is misleading.
The real issue imo and from my experience is "lack of skill" and experience.
Casa, i hope i didn't insult you or any one, it wasn't meant that way, i'm just relaying my observations from guiding peeps from all over the US and Canada.
The Nytro has its place for mountian use but needs lots of improvements IMO to be stellar.
As for weight, alot of you might not know or forgot that it wasn't long ago that the BIG DOG 2strokes were just under 600lbs.
ie. Cats "Thunder Cat 1000" 598Lbs, "Polaris RMK 900" 550Lbs, "BRPs RT1000" 575Lbs, all these monster's dominated the mountian's during their time and still today there are peeps wishing the manufactures would still build these in the newer chassies. There is a demand out there, except the darn imission compliance issue popes up.
So we are stuck with 4strokes on boost or high stung 2stroke on the edge of blowing up.
I always respected your comments on that other forum Lund, I think it was Doo Talk. I felt your comments were vilified just because you had good things to say about Yamaha, and didn't bleed yellow. I probably misconstrued your comments somewhat here, and I apologize. But I (and probably dirtmover and others) would like to know more of what's behind them.
I thought I was "out" but now I hope I have a better handle on what people are trying to say. @ mtdream, I still think all of this as totally on subject and this discussion will help dirtmover make an informed decision. It's a good discussion, I'm learning and others here are too. I could just say "keep your M7", but really what good is that unless the OP is taking a poll? Shoot, from reading and participating in this discussion, I've moved my opinion along the scale several times. Common mistake? I hardly think so, this is exactly what I look for: a good discussion that takes in a lot of opinions, it lets me gather the information I require to come to an educated position. My asking questions brings out better discussion and more opinions. @ mtdream and lund, I am not a flatlander, I live at the base of the Bighorns in WY. My residence sits at 4000 feet, the trailhead at 5000, and the playgrounds at 6000-10000. I am probably on the trail way more than I should be, but all of my riding is most definitely in the mountains, I have never ridden a sled below 5000ft.
My thoughts were and still are:
-To make a used stock MTX mountain worthy it takes a min of $5000 above the original cost of the sled, boost and track.
-When this money is spend you probably have the most mountain worthy sled on the mountain as far as power and reliability. Nothing can touch it for HP and coming home under it's own power.
-I traded my MTX and gave $4000, and ended up with a well regarded brand new mountain sled, with the track already on it that a lot of MTXs use and a large HP boost over a stock Nytro. I also have a 2 year warranty and IMO better (maybe just easier, still haven't hear the answers here) handling.
To me this was a no brainer. I spend much less than I would have to make my Nytro into something that it was not from the factory and IMO should have been
from the factory. Now in reading this thread I still wonder if I should have gone the distance with my Nytro (mtdream isn't that what this post is really about? coming to a decision about a large investment?)
So my final though here is: Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could get that fantastic Yamaha engine in a sled that handles like an M series or RMK pro? I think that would be the engineering feat I would be after if I were in Yamha's R&D department. I'd be all over it, I want a mountain slayer from the factory with Yamahas power plant and reliability and ACs handling. I really don't think that's too much to ask.