Knotty Woodworker
New member
Hi,
I got a Seat Jack for the family for Chrsitmas and I noticed that it said "anyone over 175lbs on the Seat Jack could cause suspension damage".
OK, so does that mean that the Seat Jack can only hold 175lbs, ...or are they just giving me a 'heads-up' and to take it easy on the suspension?
Has anyone had a rider close to 200lbs on a Seat Jack? I wanted to take my mother to her brother's cabin, but she's 6 foot and 190lbs, will the Seat Jack support her? I'm not too worried about the suspension, it's on the maximum setting, and I'll be going slow and it's mostly lake riding (a few trails here and there).
Thanks...
I got a Seat Jack for the family for Chrsitmas and I noticed that it said "anyone over 175lbs on the Seat Jack could cause suspension damage".
OK, so does that mean that the Seat Jack can only hold 175lbs, ...or are they just giving me a 'heads-up' and to take it easy on the suspension?
Has anyone had a rider close to 200lbs on a Seat Jack? I wanted to take my mother to her brother's cabin, but she's 6 foot and 190lbs, will the Seat Jack support her? I'm not too worried about the suspension, it's on the maximum setting, and I'll be going slow and it's mostly lake riding (a few trails here and there).
Thanks...
Jimbo
New member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2003
- Messages
- 46
It is designed for kids or small adults and that's all. Don;t even try it with heavier adults, or your suspension will collapse right on the track, and more damage will be done, depending on the sled and suspension. I have one on a MXZ500 and a 2001 SRX, and it occasionally rubs with the SRX ( that's understandabale) and barely clears on the Ski-Doo. The riders are 55 lbs ( SRX) and 76 ( Ski-Doo). Hope that helps.
tonkatoy01
New member
I have one, just make sure you are on the high setting , and check you're set in, you may have to adjust the back shock, I would not go over 150lbs