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signfan

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Posts posted by signfan

  1. Any good public parking spots in North Bay that people use to stage from?  Ive used the portage in the past, but found they discourage anything longterm (overnight).  Hotels are an option, but if were driving up in the morning and riding out I wouldn't be stayong there overnight.  The ITG shows lakeside dr as an option.  I believe its directing us to Armstrong park.  Anyone parked there?  Other options???

  2. I'm thinking just the gen 4 sleds then and probably only certain years.  With 25,000 and 30,000 km on our sleds probably no concern with this issue unless we run into a spell of bad gas somewhere.  

     

    Changing these socks is probably on some maintenance interval recommendation.  That'll be how they're getting around the recall.  If you follow the schedule this is addressed before its ever an issue to you.

  3. If its plastic then clearly a manufacturing issue.  Should be a recall, but wont happen.  What is involved in changing them for us folks that do our own work?  Is this a one time thing after the sleds been through a cpl thousand km?  Or a re-occuring maintenance item?  Seems like once its done and tank is clean wouldn't be needed again unless you get into bad gas.

  4. Some of their issues are self inflicted.  If your gear is failing before you start out on a trip like that might be worth addressing.  Not quite the right toboggan setup either.  Still pretty cool.  

    • Like 1
  5. Would eat up a ton of floor space too when not in use.  Other issue I see is you have to drive 6' across your garage before you get on it.  So you're still gonna have carbide damage to your floors vs independent wheels where you can put them on at the slab edge.  To each their own.  Would be perfect for some peoples applications I'm sure.

  6. It's the banana belt.  Snow is tough to come by.  Especially in Prince Edward County.  When they get snow the lennox and addington ridge runners in the Napanee to Kingston area do a great job.  Things get groomed up as good as anywhere in the province.  They have a rail line that is the backbone of the system and then a mix of good road allowances and farm field running.  The network they have south of the 401 is kinda neat.  Only trail I'd probably avoid is the one that runs up through Enterprise towards Tamworth.  It's tight and narrow.  Bombi type grooming or groomed with sleds.  There is no trail connection between Napanee and Belleville.  Recently they opened a trail to Sharbot lake which is also railbed.  Haven't ridden Prince Edward County yet.  On the bucket list, but haven't managed to catch them with snow and open trails yet (been trying the last few years and hasn't worked out).  Knowing the map the trails out there are somewhat limited, but there is a small trail system across the island.  Still probably worth the trek when they do get snow.  Most from Kingston head to Sharbot Lake or Cloyne for weekend riding.  That's their muskoka cottage country riding and not much over an hour from Kingston.  You also have good riding to the east (Prescott to Cornwall area) or trips to Pembroke or Western Quebec are within easy commuting distance.

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  7. 38 minutes ago, Spiderman said:

     

    They all have different laws and litigation procedures when it comes to dealing with personal injury via snowmobile accidents and how tort claims are allowed to proceed.

     

    It's not apples to apples and that is a big part of what is misunderstood.

     

    I would put to you they are defending the OFSC, their partners, and their memberships interests before they are that of the insurer.

    I am speculating -but I bet the OFSC has a fairly sizeable SIR

    You're right on the SIR.  Still begs the question what could those volunteers hours be doing instead of risk management paperwork?  If $167 per permit is volunteer hours what percentage of that goes to risk management?  I bet you the dollar value is large.  Instead of 4 hrs taking the signage course for the 15th time not learning anything wouldn't that time be better spent actually installing signs?  The legal questions are much larger than snowmobiling.  What makes Ontario so special?  We pay through the nose for insurance here vs the rest of the country.  Are accident victims better off here after the fact?  

    • Like 1
  8. 32 minutes ago, Yukon said:

    I remember a time when when the world of snowmobiling didn't want to embrace the digital era. That were all up in arms, when we left the text based trail status updates.

     

    Trail -2023 - open- from uncle stuckys outhouse, to the big tree at shits creek..

     

    This wasn't a knee jerk reaction, and we have some very good people leading this volunteer driven organization.

     

    Insurance, risk management and liabilty are all very real. 

     

    Always check the interactive trail guide for what trails are available for access!

    I hear you, but something is off in Ontario.  How can it be so different on these issues jumping just one or two provinces in any direction of Ontario.  Go to Quebec, New Brunswick or Nova Scotia and you get gps maps and groomer tracking.  There volunteers are focused on delivering an exceptional product while our volunteers are focused on defending the insurance companies interest.  It was frustrating to be involved with and is frustrating to see.  The organization has great people.  But way too much effort is going to risk management.

    • Like 5
  9. 1 hour ago, Strong Farmer said:

    The thing is in south we aren’t losing many trails to trespassing atviers. 
    It’s snowmobiles that don’t stay on trail and wonder, take short cuts etc that cause most of trail closures. Some are caused by crop damage and poor snow conditions too. These trails have crops in field until November so not even passable on an atv. No one going to take 15k atv and run over 10 foot corn on it 🤣

    Yeah maybe so.  Completely different story in cottage country.  This is an issue there too, but I'd say ATV's are still the major issue causing closures in areas that are north of the farm belt.

    • Like 1
  10. 1 minute ago, barberch said:

    I wonder where the data came from that confirmed that the reason people are riding on trails that are closed is because they are using tools like Trakmaps? When i use Trakmaps to plan my route, I always refer to the ITG to ensure the trail is available. 

    The argument would be atv's in the off season.  Its either an atv issue or an insurance liability issue or both.  Not snowmobiliers riding closed trails.

    • Like 3
  11. I got that e-mail today as well.  Wonder if they can use the same tech that gps units with traffic alerts use.  Problem is when you loose that traffic data the base map stays the same.  If they want the map data to completely disappear then its new tech that isn't common in any current gps units.  Don't know what to say here.  Landowner relations are important.  Feel like there needs to be a tech solution for this before cutting out the old.  BRP go is not the solution.  GPS units offered something almost no other current solution does.  Reliability.  They don't freeze, work all the time if powered and provide accurate real time location data without cell service.

  12. 26 minutes ago, Strong Farmer said:

    Bad experience on a claim? 
    Some people have a great experience with td and others it’s a cluster cluck. I personally like having a broker since he get best payout and service possible. Td woukdnt touch my four wheeler because it’s used commercial on my farm. Go figure. I have everything with a broker now except snowmobile. Seems most companies don’t want sleds is half problem. 

    Yep.  Was robbed.  Lost two sleds and a trailer from our driveway. Trailer was with another insurer and we had no issues settling things up.  Settled on my sled with few issues with one claims adjuster from TD.  She was great and we came to a fair deal in short order.  Wife's sled was another story.  Different adjuster and she had a stick up her arse.  After I provided numerous comparables and went back and forth for 6 plus weeks in what I felt was a respectful professional manner we finally came to an agreement that was fair.  Figured it was dealt with despite her best efforts to make me the guy that got robbed (the victim) feel like the bad guy.

     

    Went shopping several months later. Bought  the replacement sled for my wife and called TD from the road on the way home to put coverage in place.  At that point, they told me they wouldn't insure me again.  Apparently the adjuster red flagged me.  No discussion.  No mention of it.  I was shocked.  

     

    Been with L and A mutual ever since.  Pay a touch more, but I know I'm properly covered.  Had one claim at our cottage when tree blew on the dock in a wind storm.  Night and day difference working through the claim process.  You get what you pay for.  I will never deal with TD again for anything (banking, insurance, etc).  Real example of how not to treat your customers.  The adjustor may think she won, but I have and will continue to tell everyone I know what TD can be like.

    • Like 2
  13. 4 minutes ago, grover_yyz said:

    I just asked the question at AGM and the ofsc requires the map to offer realtime status updates. 

    Wow thats stupid.  Lawyers are having way to much say in Ontario snowmobiling.  

     

    Pass a motion on the floor to have the contract re-enstated.  If it's argued ask are we no longer offering paper maps because they don't offer real time status updates?

    • Like 5
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