These kinds of videos are just a good morale boost, I'm fairly young (15) and I just bought an old timberwolf but it runs well, but I have zero experience to these videos really help.
Those old timberwolfs are a good solid machine if taken care of. Im glad that you are getting some use out of the beginner videos. Its eactly what they are there for. Have fun out on the trails
Thankyou so much i learned a lot out of this video and I am a beginner rider on... trails anyway thankfully I found your video I am subbed now keep more good content coming...
Bought a bike recently. An older one. Didn't realize until after I bought it that it's raised. They did a really good job on it, but also put one of those obnoxiously loud mufflers on it. Luckily I have another one.
Good tips Ruyguy. That does look like a very rough trail I don't think I would get my side by side through there because of a couple spots between tree's me being too wide. Sometimes it's amazing too see what atv's are capable of when driven properly.
Ive fit a rhino at 57 inches wide (rims and tires) through that same Trail. I find its not the width of the base of the trail that can restrict a SxS, more even more so its the roll cage when the SxS experiences off-camber situations.
My Polaris is right around 57 inchs with my wheel spacers maybe I should give that trail a try. I use my rool cage and roof like a kick stand in those situations lol.
Just bought a used quad. Couldn't afford a SxS like the other members of my riding group. Only thing I worry about are some of the steeper hills they take.
Great tips, thanks...I just bought myself grizz 700 and I'm pretty much scared to go alone like that in to the mud and the rocks...what's the advice on how to get rid of the fear of unknowing the quads possibilities..
Hey Mehmed. Thanks for checking out the channel. I still feel a little uneasy going places alone and it takes a while to get comfortable with your quad and its capabilities. My advice #1 would be to ; if you can, never ride alone. ATV's are mechanical and things can break, or worse you could get yourself stuck or roll causing injury. Having a second person with you doubles your chances of recovery. #2) Take your time on a new to you ATV. Get to know how it feels over certain terrians and how it reacts.. don't worry about what your buddys are going through or how fast. Tire pressures, tire choice, rider and gear weight, suspension setups will all have an effect on how your ATV reacts. So play around your local trails with adding or subtracting weight or playing around with tire pressures. Get used to the way each scenario feels over various terrains. #3) Have a recovery plan. A winch, cell phone, SPOT Gps, come along/ropes..etc something to give you a chance of recovery if you get stuck and are alone. Hope these personal tips help, have fun on the trails
@@ruyguy8888 very detailed reply on my question. Thank You very much for that. I will go easy at the beginning for sure, until I learn all the scenarios u mentioned above. Thank you one more time :)
+goproatver Yes it is. We started off on Rosemary Drive and this was the tail end of a run that Myself and Bruce did. Its a rough old trail but a nice view of the lake Much more smoother in the winter
I don't advise it either haha, I don't use that trail often but it can cut off an extra 45 mins of ride time to get back to my buddy's place. Makes for a good example of how to pick a line however.