Luke explores the championship winning characteristics of Ski-Doo’s snocross race sled and its influence on the MXZ trail sled line-up.
AJ takes a closer look at the 2025 Arctic Cat lineup going into detail where you can find the ALL-NEW 858 2-stroke engine if you’re looking to spring order a new Cat.
Then he’s in the TRAIL TECH shop outfitting a couple of our sleds with Kimpex’s growing assortment of Connect tunnel accessories including an assortment of bags, racks and gas cans.
Then in TEST RIDE, Motorhead Mark hits the trails aboard Ski-Doo’s 2024 Renegade XRS 900 Turbo R 4-stoke powerhouse.
Follow along as Luke and AJ head off-trail for a fun time aboard a pair of Widescape WS250 stand-up snowmobiles and challenge each other to go places no the tracked vehicle has gone before.
Then in TEST RIDE, Motorhead Mark shares his thoughts on the 2024 Polaris Indy XC featuring the PROSTAR S4 4-stroke engine.
Then AJ’s lighting up the trail aboard the fully jammed and fully turbo’d 2024 Polaris Indy VR1 137 featuring the Patriot Boost turbocharged 2-stroke engine.
For the COMPLETE eighth episode of the 2024 SNOWTRAX season, Luke and AJ sit down to discuss wet weights of some of this season’s most popular sleds and respond to your comments about what the scale uncovered following our YOUTUBE-EXCLUSIVE 2024 snowmobile wet weights weigh-in featuring our entire fleet of sleds.
Luke explores the championship winning characteristics of Ski-Doo’s snocross race sled and its influence on the MXZ trail sled line-up, particularly the MXZ XRS Competition Package.
The advancement of multi-media displays on today’s snowmobiles has had a dramatic impact on the way people enjoy snowmobiling. In fact, displays now rank as one of top five considerations for a new snowmobile purchase.
The way in which a rider interacts with the display and its ease of operation also plays a critical role. Ski-Doo is aware of this and has worked hard on improving its communication pairing technology between a rider’s helmet and its 10.25-inch Touchscreen Display.
Built in partnership with Sena, the Vibe Communication System is an advanced integrated helmet communication system specifically designed for demanding winter conditions.
With up to 8 hours of battery life in -20C weather, you can chat, listen and ride worry-free all day long. The Vibe open mesh system allows the choice of 9 channels so you can keep the conversation going between your riding crew without interruption on a range up to 1.6 km.
One click is all it takes to connect the Vibe Communication System to your phone or vehicle display and enable a line of communication between your entire riding group.
While the Ski-Doo Advex Helmet is purposely designed to seamlessly accept the Vibe Communication System to the side of the helmet, the product specialists at Ski-Doo have improved the versatility of the Vibe Communication System which now expands to fit all helmets offer by Ski-Doo for 2025.
Rapid charging capability ensures the Vibe Communication System is at full capacity and ready to ride whenever you are. When using the Advex Radiant Helmet, riders can pair the Ski-Doo exclusive E-LinQ accessory system and the Vibe Communication System will be constantly powered so you can chat, listen, and ride all day.
For more information on the Vibe Communication System visit ski-doo.brp.com
AJ takes a closer look at the 2025 Arctic Cat lineup going into detail where you can find the ALL-NEW 858 2-stroke engine if you’re looking to spring order a new Cat.
So what’s going on at Lynx for MY 2025? Before we go too far down the “whats new” rabbit hole, let’s talk about something that’s related to Lynx, Ski-Doo and BRP.
I don’t think many of our insightful readers and viewers missed the point when BRP pushed the “sell Lynx in North America” button three years ago. It was obvious BRP was up to something bigger than just shipping a bunch of Lynx boxes to this side of the big pond and selling them to early-order buyers with no in-season models available. Go to the 2025 Lynx site and you’ll see Lynx already has in-season models peppered throughout its lineup.
More importantly is the rumbling heard from Valcourt. Rumbling? MY26 may bring stand alone Lynx dealers to the party. It’s no secret that successful dealers all over the North American snowbelt have had the grass on fire under phone lines leading to Valcourt, Quebec. These dealers want to be in the sno-mo-biz and for the most part are high quality, credible retailers. This has had to be awfully tempting for BRP to sign up some of these dealers where territorial conflicts with established Ski-Doo dealers don’t exist.
My point here is this. Lynx is no longer a boutique brand. Expect its retail footprint to expand exponentially over the next two to three model years. Yes, the Lynx name carries copious cache and exclusivity. However, there will be easier access to Lynx sleds on both early-order programs and in-season.
The topic here is the Lynx RAVE RE 600R. This sled is new to the North American marketplace and is a dynamite entry into the huge 600 trail segment. It is cut from Lynx cloth using the Radien2 chassis and the now legendary PPS3 skidframe, which is the heart of a Lynx trail sled.
In this configuration, PPS3 is uncoupled but uses a rising rate linkage on the rear arm and two of the sweetest aluminum body, KYB PRO 46 HLCR Kashima coated coilover shocks. Keep in mind Lynx snowmobiles are built for northern European ungroomed trails and the capacity this rear skid displays for swallowing jinormous whoops is unrivaled in this industry. The PPS3 system can be driven into anything short of a canyon and come through in complete control. No swapping ends, no kick back, no handlebar whip. This 600 RAVE RE is the benchmark for rough trail competence.
So, if you’re wondering if rMotion is now in second place, Nope, it is not. rMotion is built for North American trails that can be rough but are nonetheless groomed. Here is where rMotion hangs its helmet. However, if you see yourself as a big bump jockey, a RAVE RE 600R may be your ticket to official iconic status.
The rest of the 600 RE is familiar and easy to understand. There’s BRP’s available 10.25 inch touch screen, re-invented switch gear (again) and LFS+ front suspension and Blade XC+ skis. Underhood, there’s a full-on ROTAX 600R E-TEC twin with available E-start. The laundry list of features is familiar and bulletproof. Finish quality (no pun intended) is equally as clean, tight and visually appealing as anything BRP builds here in North America.
A nice touch is the 600 RE’s inclusion of closed-off footrests and frosted white running lights hidden in the depths of the hood panels. The 600 RAVE RE also comes with a 1.5-inch Ice Ripper. BTW, the 3500 track length designation on the tunnel is metric for 137 inches.
Lynx is going to have overnight sales success with the RAVE RE 600R. This sled delivers exclusivity and one-of-a-kind handling on the roughest trails anywhere.