Kelly, I have a question for you, not related to the "kawa-bunga" project but vintage related. What would you consider one of the rarest snowmobiles ever manufactured that you have either seen or known of, and if there was that "one sled" you could get your hands on if you could only find one...what would it be?
A couple of good questions Brian and I really had to think about it for a while.
I guess when it comes to rare sleds, I’d have to look at it from the perspective of, as you said, sleds I’ve seen.
Probably one of the rarest sleds I’ve seen in person was a Snowbug. Saw a fully restored one at the Copper Harbor vintage event a few years back. According to the Top of the Lake Museum article I read, they were built by a company in Sudbury, Ontario and only 50 were built in 1970. Don’t have a personal photo but it looked like this.
Another sled that I was able to lay eyes on that was surprisingly rare was a 1982 John Deere Snowfire. A guy over in WI that I used to buy some parts from had a big collection of valuable Deere snowmobiles, one of which was an 82 Snowfire. Considering the thousands of sleds Deere built, it’s curious that they only built 175 of these in 82. You can see the Spitfire influence in this Snowfire ad photo. Small, light, direct drive, free-air sled.
I had a much tougher time nailing down an answer to your second question. While there’s still a few around, it definitely fits in the rare category by production numbers and if money were no object, I’d have to go with a Brut as that one sled I’d still like to be able to find and own. That triple carb, liquid engine was quite a piece of engineering for the day. Yes, some parts are next to impossible to locate but going out to the shop, firing one up and hearing it run would be special.
Took these shots at Waconia in 2013. Sharp sleds, in my opinion.
