Shane Redline
New Member
Can the Yamaha YXZ become a Baja 500/1000 car?
If so, paddle or 5 speed?
If so, paddle or 5 speed?
It absolutely can/has/will be......and I also would go 5-speed manual.
It's a mediocre desert car. Baja would be a huge challenge. Finishing on top is a longshor without a Robby Gordon type make over. I ageee it's fast in the straights as u can see in the video but completely loses it once it gets rough. For those who don't know that's one of Yamahas top drivers and builders against an average joe in a Rzr 1000 bootstrapping along. Not impressive. Staggs may do better but Yamaha at Baja is a handicap you don't need in an unforgiving place like that. But it could change quickly as we see with Arctic Cat.
Sure hope Pfeifer can put on a good showing tomorrow in the Penhall Yamaha....That thing is very nice!
It's funny that you are judging the YXZ in the desert based on a few very select videos and instances. Fact is.....I took a basically stock suspended, stock motor, bone stock chassis YXZ and placed 7th in a very competitive class in Vegas to Reno last year. I am not a seasoned desert racer, we had ONE chase truck, zero test time, and we built that car in a week. LOL! Gunner Savage podiumed in the MINT 400 this year, in his YXZ - crickets on that one. Jeff Pahleygi ran his YXZ in the Baja 1000 last year and was going good until an aftermarket parts failure. If you are saying the YXZ can't hang in the desert, lets just look at what you are comparing it to.......4-seat, lengthened chassis that have WAAAAY more wheelbase and are practically Class 10 cars, which, IMO should never have been allowed in the same class as regular length. two seat chassis to begin with. On top of that, I doubt any RZR can podium in the desert unless it's been completely torn down and rebuilt from the ground up - hell, they can't even finish a short-course race unless a ton of stock parts are replaced with aftermarket. True production car to production car, the YXZ would dominate in the desert - in a TRUE production class - based on reliability and build quality alone. Desert racing classes, as they are now, are NO accurate representation of ANY manufacturer in the UTV classes because the rules allow SO much custom fabrication and work to be done. That being said, the YXZ will be on the podium more and more, despite the bus-length chassis we have to compete against, because it is a solid machine and fully capable of kicking some ass. It seriously makes me laugh when I hear people say it sucks in the desert......
I think they can and will be competative, but it does take time and testing. In pure stock form, not in baja, however the Weller's are testing parts and I'd think given a nice massage of the front suspension it would be on par with the other non-stock cars.It's funny that you are judging the YXZ in the desert based on a few very select videos and instances. Fact is.....I took a basically stock suspended, stock motor, bone stock chassis YXZ and placed 7th in a very competitive class in Vegas to Reno last year. I am not a seasoned desert racer, we had ONE chase truck, zero test time, and we built that car in a week. LOL! Gunner Savage podiumed in the MINT 400 this year, in his YXZ - crickets on that one. Jeff Pahleygi ran his YXZ in the Baja 1000 last year and was going good until an aftermarket parts failure. If you are saying the YXZ can't hang in the desert, lets just look at what you are comparing it to.......4-seat, lengthened chassis that have WAAAAY more wheelbase and are practically Class 10 cars, which, IMO should never have been allowed in the same class as regular length. two seat chassis to begin with. On top of that, I doubt any RZR can podium in the desert unless it's been completely torn down and rebuilt from the ground up - hell, they can't even finish a short-course race unless a ton of stock parts are replaced with aftermarket. True production car to production car, the YXZ would dominate in the desert - in a TRUE production class - based on reliability and build quality alone. Desert racing classes, as they are now, are NO accurate representation of ANY manufacturer in the UTV classes because the rules allow SO much custom fabrication and work to be done. That being said, the YXZ will be on the podium more and more, despite the bus-length chassis we have to compete against, because it is a solid machine and fully capable of kicking some ass. It seriously makes me laugh when I hear people say it sucks in the desert......
I think they can and will be competative, but it does take time and testing. In pure stock form, not in baja, however the Weller's are testing parts and I'd think given a nice massage of the front suspension it would be on par with the other non-stock cars.
Corry, this is purely an ignorance based question, but on the surface it doesn't appear that Yamaha has engaged in desert racing as much as Polaris and Can-Am, at this point. I base this on nothing more than seeing your involvement as well as Greaves. We see Polaris sponsoring racing and events (no doubt because of Joey & Mad Media) and Can-Am stepped up at KOH this year. Obviously you know know a lot more, but do you see them willing to become as involved as Polaris/Can-Am?
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