ohanacreek
My EcoBoost has I4WD
Moderator
Lifetime Member
@ohanacreek,
You make it sound like everyone that has had problems are the ones to blame. Show me one instance of a clutch burning up or a bent connecting rod, because the engine ingested water, that was the owners fault. You should be able to spin tires pulling someone out all day long and not burn up you're clutch. Or drive through any amount of water, especially 2-3" and not have to worry about breaking your engine. These are the things that are serious negatives that should have been dealt with before it ever hit the market. You shouldn't have to snorkel and fix the vent lines on a new machine just to prevent catastrophic damage to your brand new machine, then have Honda tell you it was your fault! Hondas just aren't supposed to have these types of problems from the get go. It's very disappointing coming from a Honda product.
That is not what I said, read it all again. I faulted no one, I said whoever did cause it, needs to own up to it, whether that is the the Driver OR HONDA.
I don't understand there is a WHOLE AFTERMARKET for CVT clutches and its accepted that they suck. Honda has @3% of them fail (for a S.W.A.G., "I" speculate about half of that is on the owner and half is on Honda) and people lose there minds. Only a few of those have not been covered by warranty BUT there were public admissions of OBVIOUS GLARING FAULT. Then the way the local Multi-brand dealer would tell you ALL Pioneer 1000s have clutch failures before you get them to the initial service, BUT they are the biggest Polaris dealer in town.....I'll let you make your own assumptions on that one.
Lets not forget the aftermarket for Polaris: balljoints, axles, reverse chains, a-arms, bushings, control arms, that are expected to be replaced if you are going to do anything more than ride around your yard...etc.... Then add on flaming balls of POPO that cause recalls because of injuries and deaths....but thats accepted and expected...(shakes head)
2-3 Feet of water is one thing 2-3 inches hasn't caused anyone trouble. Unless that 2-3 inches was on top of 2-3 feet of water. The intake on the 1000 is ALMOST 3' off the ground if you hit a hole at 15-20 mph water is going to get PUSHED over the grill and possibly under the hood into the intake? If you go into 3' deep water that is BEYOND the expectations of the design and thats DEEP water, that IS your fault!
You don't have to snorkel the intake or the vent lines, unless you plan on riding through 2-3' of water or ACCIDENTALLY finding a mud hole the swallows the front of your vehicle. I do it JUST in case I find a hole that swallows the front of my vehicle or it gets suddenly deeper than I expected. I don't ever plan on riding through water deeper than about 18-24 inches, and I am not going to hit that water at 35mph. Ever been skiing and fallen at 35mph? Water is amazingly hard at that speed.
If you aren't spinning the tires then the clutch is slipping if you are spinning the tires then its not slipping, don't slip the clutch in a violent manner, you wouldn't do it in anything else with a clutch and NOT fear burning it up. I have seen plenty of Jeeps and Samurais burn up their clutch trying to get unstuck or past an obstacle and were experienced drivers. IT STILL HAPPENS and its still not Jeeps fault. Use your winch if you or someone else is stuck that badly, and have it wired to an isolated second(or third or fourth) battery just like most full-size off-roaders expecting to use their winch do. If you're stuck so bad it drains the battery, you have to wait till it charges back up and keep winching. Also carry proper recovery gear, a ratchet strap is NOT recovery gear.
Did you roll it and bend the ROPS? well its not supposed to be laying on the ROPS thats an acronym for Roll Over Protection System not the drive train.
I am sure you can buy a doomsday pioneer that is ready for anything, but you're going to pay extra for the accessories and time to add them, they don't come off the showroom floor ready for your use, you set it up for how you are going to use it.