Where do we go from here?

whitedust

Well-known member
Let me throw a knuckle ball at you. How about a restoring a Blade? I would love to hear your comments about the engineering of that puppy. I didn’t get into sleds until the early 90s so difficult for me to relate to your antiques but I do admire your abilities to give oldies new life. 👍
 

skiroule

Well-known member

Gary, it’s remarkable that you were able to find such an amazing likeness, although, in fairness I think my quads have a little better definition. It does pay respect to the weight of having to make such difficult decisions though.

Let me throw a knuckle ball at you. How about a restoring a Blade? I would love to hear your comments about the engineering of that puppy. I didn’t get into sleds until the early 90s so difficult for me to relate to your antiques but I do admire your abilities to give oldies new life. 👍
FYI Whitedust, I could never hit a knuckleball :).

Blade, wow, I hadn’t thought about them for a long, long time I don’t remember them all that well so your question motivated me to do a little reading. My take is that the Blade sleds were a combination of engineering innovation and practicality:

Just to name a few features on the Stryker model, it had a dual A-arm front suspension that was an engineering masterpiece and used an M10 rear suspension, both of which were state of art suspensions at the time. The chaincase and jackshaft were eliminated in the drive system, which sounds like some kind of spinoff of direct drive systems of the 70’s . The Stryker also had a reverse mounted motor, with the carbs facing forward (possibly to accommodate the drive system), and a very different rider seating angle from other sleds of the time, which was essentially adopted by the big brands in later years. With a standard 136” track, the ride and handling were said to be excellent.

Although there was a lot of out of the box thinking, Blade went to Polaris for their Liberty motors, with the 700 being the mainstay and other options available. They also used Polaris handlebars, and the tank looks suspiciously like the tank on my 2000 XC.

Thanks for reminding me about this piece of snowmobiling history. Would be cool to score one but think it’s a long shot. The low production numbers make them truly rare sleds. For those that are curious, this is photo of a Blade Stryker. Beautiful, innovative sled, hard to believe this design is from the very early 2000's. Too bad the little Eveleth, MN based company couldn’t make It in a tough market.


Striker-Closeup_1.jpg
 
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euphoric1

Well-known member
Scorpion Corporate video “Seven Deadly Sins”.

History of Scorpion - I love how they went with a wider design, 33” stance 😳
"Hairy chested goof up" LOL X10000!!! had to laugh at a "Collision at 20 mph" too...but in all reality its not funny and a video newbies and some seasoned riders need to watch too! Great post!!
 

euphoric1

Well-known member
what about a Merc Snow-twister or Trail Twister or a Sno-jet? I don't know about the rest of you but if 90's are "vintage" then I'm really older than I think I am LOL!! besides.... that Polaris XLT throwback IMO... best looking newer throwback sled out there, vintage is vintage and IMO 90's aren't vintage....enough ;) got to be something you don't see too often other than at "vintage ride in's" IMO...Blades are kinda fugly
 

heckler56

Well-known member
what about a Merc Snow-twister or Trail Twister or a Sno-jet? I don't know about the rest of you but if 90's are "vintage" then I'm really older than I think I am LOL!! besides.... that Polaris XLT throwback IMO... best looking newer throwback sled out there, vintage is vintage and IMO 90's aren't vintage....enough ;) got to be something you don't see too often other than at "vintage ride in's" IMO...Blades are kinda fugly
Hey Brian, a guy has a “fugly” for sale in Toledo, $3,500… I am with you on old… Kelly got me researching and the Sno Jet by me is a sweet looking sled.
 

euphoric1

Well-known member
Kelly, if you end up getting a blade, I have a new brochure from 25 years ago when they first came out it’s yours
what was their claim to fame on that front suspension? looks like mechanical nightmare :oops: and are those anti-snowmobile missiles on the lower side of belly pan? LOL! can you scan and post literature? curious of the ideas on it
 

mezz

Well-known member
what was their claim to fame on that front suspension? looks like mechanical nightmare :oops: and are those anti-snowmobile missiles on the lower side of belly pan? LOL! can you scan and post literature? curious of the ideas on it
The Blade was a specialty sled that made an appearance in the '99-2000 year. The sled was a custom built sled which was produced by FAST in Eveleth, MN. This sled was the creation of the Karpik brothers Gerard & Dave Karpik who specialized in suspensions, notably the aftermarket M-10 suspension.
The sled came equipped with a Polaris Liberty case reed twins with 700 & 800 cc motors. They also incorporated Polaris handle bars & seats & possibly the headlamp & gas tank as well. Production numbers were initially set at 500 and they were not cheap starting at $16,000 & up to $23,000. Remember, this is a 1999-2000 model year which is reflection prices of new sleds today.
They were said to be the best handling trail sled on the market due to their low center of gravity drivetrain, rider forward design (well before Doo) as well as the renowned suspension in both the front & rear constructed of billet aluminum. The sleds also had carbon fiber flex skis with dual runners, the big four were still on steel skis at the time. In 2000-2001 they did offer a 600 cc version however, the Blade remained under limited production as these sleds were hand built, not done on an assembly line.
There were a few other manufactures in this time frame as well such as A&D Boivin with the Snowhawk (Snow bike) sold only in kit form, Crazy Mountain Motorsports with the X-Treme 800 & 1000 cc motors built for competition mountain/hill climbing which was another $18,000 to $23,000 sled, Redline Snowmobiles with the Revolt 800 at $12,000, Goat Industries which produced a competition mountain hill climbing sled called the Highmark 185 at $18,000, Scorpion Recreational Products with the Sidewinder 800 SS in 2000 & a TKX in 2001with an 890 cc motor at $16,000. There was also a manufacturer by the name of Three R Industries that produced the Trail Roamer which was a sit in trail sled driven by a Kohler 725 v-twin paired with twin tracks & an estimated top speed of 55 to 60 mph. Unfortunately, all were short lived.
 
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