Sorry I don't know how to decode the VIN but mine is, 1HFVE042XG4000292
Interesting. In your VIN you have 042XG where I have 0461G. Wonder what the differences mean.......
Waylan
Sorry I don't know how to decode the VIN but mine is, 1HFVE042XG4000292
Thanks Waylan, I may do just that. We have a pretty big group out of Hattiesburg that all ride together. We were planning on Boggs and Boulders but we may stay local and ride Texas Flat and maybe some at Muddy Joes. Save the big trip for when it's 100%. I'm also patiently waiting for portal boxes to be released to fit my 32's.If it's not ready, I'd pick it up and run it for the trip you had planned. I would not miss a trip, and I don't recall anyone saying theirs left them completely stranded. Are you planning to ride with others or alone? If with others just bring a rope?
Waylan
37000 views and almost as many opinions. Honda is not going to issue anything to this forum, and it is highly unlikely they are going to say anything of substance to their dealers. This is a very very small problem, for only a few people.(sorry if you are one of them, but that is the truth) I am sure that Honda will fix whatever it is, and the new ones are going to have that fix, and eventually, if mine breaks, it will as well. Many people commenting on here seem to think this is a new thing, as if there hasn't ever been a Honda issue in the past or that a new vehicle has some sort of teething issues. Honda Goldwing frames cracked, and eventually they were all repaired, but it wasn't in the first three months of the issue being found. Ford F150's rear ends in 2010 where likely to grenade, and if you were lucky, they fixed it under warranty, if you were not.... I am not thrilled that there MIGHT be an issue with my clutches, but NOT all are failing, although some are. I think there are a LOT fewer than what Yamaha ran into with the YXZ, and I haven't heard of a recall there either.
Keep calm, drive it like you want. If you really want a new clutch before they have any available hold your machine on a hill with the gas. Anything can be broken, and most everything will be sooner or later.
Interesting. In your VIN you have 042XG where I have 0461G. Wonder what the differences mean.......
Waylan
That was one of the main reasons I bought the Honda over the RZR turbo or General. Plus I had a 1st year RZR 900xp and sportsman 1000. Polaris sells s*** and let's the users figure out the problems. I had to weld new brackets to the frame for the A-arms, air box issues etc. On the quad over half of the people we talked to had issues with the exhaust running so hot it was melting plastics and polaris never did a dang thing to fix it. Everyones fix was to get an aftermarket muffler. One guys sued them in court and won the case for the amount of money to repair the plastics and purchase an aftermarket exhaust + attorney feesCheck out the Turbo RZR forum. RZR XP Turbo - Polaris RZR Forum - RZR Forums.net Clutch problems has 595 posts and over 47,000 views. They have some other major failures too and Polaris appears to be doing nothing to help these customers with over $27,000 invested. Now they have a $2,000 rebate so the guys just took another hit in their resale value. I bought 3 Polaris models and will never buy another although the New General model looks pretty nice. Hoping for some Honda Sport models this year.
Two thoughts.I would bet its just bad o rings on the clutch shaft. probably cut during install of the clutch. if we all remember right the Rincon had a similar problem the fist year. oil pump would give you a problem with all gears.
Here is the 2016 Honda Pioneer lineup model # vs. VIN# series.This is a little old, the Big Red and P700 are covered but not the P500 and P1k:
http://powersports.honda.com/documents/support/2011-2014 VIN Guide.pdf
Also it is short on detail, There is no list for the vehicle description codes.
I would guess the different codes are for 3 seat vs 5 seat, what grade, not sure if color is included.
So basically I have nothing....
View attachment 11725
the amount of assembly lube to thicken the oil is like a drop in the bucket! def not enough to change the weight of the oil in the slightest amount. Furthermore u could run a heavier or lighter weight oil anyways with Hondas approval. Telling us the above is def not the problem. I do see what u are getting at! I would say if it was 20w50 or something it could possibly effect the clutches. Good thoughts!!So food for thought here...I don't have a service manual so I'm going off what @Hondasxs is saying about the dct and how it works.
I know it's a wet system and uses oil for it. Disregard what Honda says for breakin of the machine. With conventional oil there is less lubricity in the oil hence one reason synthetic oil is usually looked at for being a better oil (but makes conventional oil better for breakin). So when ur motor and trans using the same oil is first being worn in there will be a couple things goin on with it. It will be seating rings and other parts and there will be metals in your oil (weather you see them or not). Also there is typically assembly greased used on the parts which in my experience is is thicker than oil. All this in my experience would lead to contaminated oil and thicker less lubricity oil than conventional oil already has. So when I think of little passages in a motor and this trans being the life line for it shifting and engaging it's shifts fully makes me wonder if either metals or thicker oil properties are effecting the oil being delivered to the clutch for shifts and engagements (Honda has told some to change there oil and see if that fixes it). And it seems like some peoples oils are really black when you have done your first oil change.
Maybe this is a stretch and I am just trying to think out of the box for those with issues and that after years of development and testing on this that Honda would not have the clutches able to take some of the riding people are doing with it or there has been an assembly issue that they are tracking down. I brokein my machine is like this and haven't had any issues so far: I let it warm up some before driving it. Then drove it around warming it up completely but didn't drive so slow that the shift wasn't a solid shift. Then after warm up I didn't take it to full redline for the first 15-20 miles but I did have it go through the gears completely and went up to at least 6000+ rpms. After the first 15-20 miles I took all the way through the rpms but on flat ground and kept doing it never letting it sit at an rpm for very long. At 5 hours or so on the machine I changed the oil (gotta get that breakin crap out of there). I then put the conventional oil in again. Now I still warmed it up completely before really pushing it but would go through the rpms to red line and had the gas pedal to the floor a lot. Still not letting it sit at one rpm for long. Then at 20-25 hours on the machine I changed to Amsoil full synthetic and now am running it as hard and labor some as I want. I am told by many that I'm anal but that is what I did and my bike feels awesome!
Not saying any of this is the difference especially if it's an assembly problem but I do feel bad for those with issues and would not want to have them with mine. Just reaching for different thoughts trying to help. Please pick my thoughts apart just can't stop thinking that it's not an issue so easy (like not a strong enough clutch) for Honda to have seen in the testing stages!
the amount of assembly lube to thicken the oil is like a drop in the bucket! def not enough to change the weight of the oil in the slightest amount. Furthermore u could run a heavier or lighter weight oil anyways with Hondas approval. Telling us the above is def not the problem. I do see what u are getting at! I would say if it was 20w50 or something it could possibly effect the clutches. Good thoughts!!