you know what they say.... "you wanna play you gotta pay" no more true statement than that, but hey... who's counting? and yes, lets hope on gas prices, diesel finally starting to fall too.Hey, "Snowmobiling is Inexpensive", said no one, ever...They should be able to do a sled oil change for much less than 225. As stated above, two drain plugs and a filter and you're back out there. The reason the Spyder is more because of the time needed. It has to be on a lift and body panels need to come off to get to the engine. That, and they use BRP products which run a bit higher than others.
Best News of all, Regular Gasoline which most 4 Strokes burn is under 3 bucks a gallon locally. Let's hope it stays there for the snow season.
"you wanna play you gotta pay"
Yes im familiar with the procedure...I have a 2021 Ryker 600...The reason the Spyder is more because of the time needed. It has to be on a lift and body panels need to come off to get to the engine. That, and they use BRP products which run a bit higher than others.
3 yrs is pretty decent for a power sports battery. Especially if it wasnt maintained on a tender periodically in the off-season.I charged my ski doo ace sled battery 3 days ago and sled started with no problem. When I try to start it now the past 2 days, the system lights and gas guage light up as normal, but I just get a click click click sound.....I recharged battery now for 12 hours with my battery maintainer, and system lights come on with the normal 2 beeps, but just got one click and no start.
The battey maintainer has a green light fully charged on it, so is it the battery or the starter????? The battery is around 3 years old.
I give 3 to 5 years on batteries in powersports and lawn and garden applications, I know there are a lot of people who use tenders and have luck with them, but I am not a fan. Most things with some kind of CPU will have some kind of parasitic draw. if batteries are going to sit idle between seasons I recommend disconnecting cables, put a full charge on battery and charge again once before putting back in use. when a battery sits for any period of time and draws down and sits that way it seems that's when the problems start. I would have the battery tested, a volt meter is not a tester, you need a tester that will tell CCA, voltage and reserve capacity. That will give you the true picture of the integrity of the battery. One thing to always remember when buying a battery.... you get what you pay for. IMO Yuasa for powersports and Deka or Penn for all others.3 yrs is pretty decent for a power sports battery. Especially if it was maintained on a tender periodically in the off-season.