OT - Recommendation for a youth ATV/4-wheeler

Seinfeld

All-American
Nov 30, 2006
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So I should probably preface this by saying that we don't hunt or spend a lot of time in the woods, so I'm not looking for something that can crawl through lava or that will last til the end of time.

However, I do have a couple kids that would love something to run around the yard/cove in, and I'm honestly lost. I started looking at electric options by MotoTec and Pioneer, but those things look a lot smaller than what I had in mind, and the reviews are saying that you're lucky to get 45 min on a charge. Then, I started looking at X-Pro, but by the time I got to one that looked like the right size, I was quickly getting up into the $2-3k price range.

Do y’all have any recommendations for a purely recreational ATV for a 10 year old? Also, any advice on what I should be on the lookout for in terms of quality and safety?
 

stateu1

All-Conference
Mar 21, 2016
3,009
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So I should probably preface this by saying that we don't hunt or spend a lot of time in the woods, so I'm not looking for something that can crawl through lava or that will last til the end of time.

However, I do have a couple kids that would love something to run around the yard/cove in, and I'm honestly lost. I started looking at electric options by MotoTec and Pioneer, but those things look a lot smaller than what I had in mind, and the reviews are saying that you're lucky to get 45 min on a charge. Then, I started looking at X-Pro, but by the time I got to one that looked like the right size, I was quickly getting up into the $2-3k price range.

Do y’all have any recommendations for a purely recreational ATV for a 10 year old? Also, any advice on what I should be on the lookout for in terms of quality and safety?
Advice: Do not tell them your are buying for the kid. I got turned away at a dealership about 10 years ago because I told them I was buying for a kid that was under 16. Why they didn't just tell me to go outside, come back in and don't say that I have no idea.
 
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o_Hot Rock

Senior
Jan 2, 2010
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Bought my first motorcycle when I was 12 first, horse at 5. I wrecked that bike so many times, it's a miracle I am alive but the horse was more dangerous as she was skittish as heck. I got thrown so many times that I learned to fall and be prepared for it all times. Any sun reflection or movement in the grass and her butt is gone, hang on at your own peril or jump off if you dare to save yourself. She would absolutely lose it.

Not saying don't buy it. Go for it but keep their asses out of the road or take it away. Even experienced riders get killed on the roads on these things. Good friend of mine lost his life on one.

There is something to be said for allowing kids to do dangerous things but within some sort of control. Only thing my parents required was wear a helmet, glad as freak I did to, full face guard type or those two trees (different wrecks) would have probably killed my ignorant ***.

Horse ran into a tree as well, with me on it, we both hit our heads. Both dazed, she stumbled back as I was gathering my thoughts hanging from her neck and head area as I was riding bareback. She was spooked by me raising my BB gun over my head an yelling like an Indian. I was 8. I jumped off as she was about to start running again. She was gone for hours, finally came home.
 

The Peeper

Heisman
Feb 26, 2008
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My son in law bought 2 for his boys (age 11 and 8) and they outgrew them fast and don't even want to ride them now because they are small, they want full size . Save your money for a few years until they can handle a large enough one (mentally & physically) that will last them for some years, at least that's what he said he would do now.
 

horshack.sixpack

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Oct 30, 2012
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My son in law bought 2 for his boys (age 11 and 8) and they outgrew them fast and don't even want to ride them now because they are small, they want full size . Save your money for a few years until they can handle a large enough one (mentally & physically) that will last them for some years, at least that's what he said he would do now.
They will be mentally ready somewhere between 25 and 32...
 
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Yeti

Senior
Feb 20, 2018
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Don’t buy one. If you were hunting it on a farm yes but just around the yard and neighborhood is asking for trouble. Neighbors kid gets on it gets hurt and it’s Hi I’m Alexander Shunnaraha
 
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johnson86-1

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Aug 22, 2012
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There is something to be said for allowing kids to do dangerous things but within some sort of control. Only thing my parents required was wear a helmet, glad as freak I did to, full face guard type or those two trees (different wrecks) would have probably killed my ignorant ***.
This is something we struggle with. Don't want to put them in a position to permanently make their life worse, but they need to be exposed to real risk to learn how to spot it and manage it. Litigation has largely done away with the playground equipment where you'd break a limb if you were reckless. Kids jump to electric scooters and bikes that can kill them before they learn to ride a regular bike. I can't remember the last time I saw kids trying to jump their bikes on anything, which is a great way to get hurt but rarely permanently injured (talking plyboard over cinder block type jumps, not anything death defying). But I do see 9 year olds going 20mph on an e-scooter without a helmet or driving a golf cart going 30 on public roads with kids hanging off the back and sides.
 

M R DAWGS

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Apr 13, 2018
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I’m normally a Yamaha guy, and when my son was little he had a 90 Grizzly which was a great ATV. He is 10 now and has since upgraded to a Honda 250 Recon. I like it and he does as well, but it is cold-natured as hell.

Yamaha for some reason doesn’t have an atv in the 200-250cc range.

My advice would be to go with a brand that is known for reliability. I have had family members buy cheap Chinese atvs for their kids, and they lasted a couple of weeks before having major problems. Buy something that will last.
 
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Dawgbite

All-American
Nov 1, 2011
8,745
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They were dangerous but when treated with respect they were the best damn thing ever built for hunting. Would go absolutely anywhere. Easy to work on. Cranked on first pull. Wish I still had mine.
My brother in law just sold a mint Big Red for $2800 and had people fighting over it.
 
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Pars

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Oct 11, 2015
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My poor dad saved up and bought a Yamaha Big Bear in the 90s l. I wrecked that thing and about killed my brother the first weekend.
he also had a three wheel golf cart for about a month before I somehow flipped it and almost killed my sister.

me being a 17 up middle child was discovered at an early age
 
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Walkthedawg

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Oct 3, 2022
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So I should probably preface this by saying that we don't hunt or spend a lot of time in the woods, so I'm not looking for something that can crawl through lava or that will last til the end of time.

However, I do have a couple kids that would love something to run around the yard/cove in, and I'm honestly lost. I started looking at electric options by MotoTec and Pioneer, but those things look a lot smaller than what I had in mind, and the reviews are saying that you're lucky to get 45 min on a charge. Then, I started looking at X-Pro, but by the time I got to one that looked like the right size, I was quickly getting up into the $2-3k price range.

Do y’all have any recommendations for a purely recreational ATV for a 10 year old? Also, any advice on what I should be on the lookout for in terms of quality and safety?
Don’t mess with electric or Chinese crap. You want a 250 Honda Recon. At 10, they are going to grow out of a small one before you break it in.

there is a way to limit the throttle on them so they won’t be running around too fast on it.
 
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o_Hot Rock

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Jan 2, 2010
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Limiting throttle sounds good and it works until they figure out how to change it themselves. That's the first thing we would do to everything we got our hands on was to figure that out. In today's world, google will expedite that process unless their is some sort of parental lock but even those can be figured out.

I let my daughter drive a golf cart way too early unsupervised. She ran over a propane tank and panicked. Gas was spewing and she still held the throttle down freaking out. I heard the crash around the house and went running, scared the heck out of all of us.

My rules would be:
1) helmet required or you don't get on it.
2) no riders - that's what caused my daughters wreck, passenger messed with the forward/reverse on the cart and cart went backwards.
3) only ride when you can watch them - you can still watch without them knowing to make sure they are following whatever limits you set. Modern cameras are pretty cool what you can set up.

They can be managed and are probably safer than any trampoline.
 
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Jan 9, 2016
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View attachment 956548
Remember back in the day when no one saw the possible flaw in this design?
'79 model? ^^ needs extensions.

Every kid in the delta had one of these back in the 70's & early 80's. It's a wonder I'm here considering how I rode as a kid. Grew up with a guy that developed narcolepsy in high school from multiple ATV accidents.
 
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Dawgbite

All-American
Nov 1, 2011
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Hey, let's put helium in the tires and drive it on the lake!
Didn’t need helium. Went across the stock pond behind the house hundreds of times. Even lost my balance and fell off a few times and got really wet.
 

Drebin

Heisman
Aug 22, 2012
21,490
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Didn’t need helium. Went across the stock pond behind the house hundreds of times. Even lost my balance and fell off a few times and got really wet.
definitely didnt need it, but it helped.
 

Dawgbite

All-American
Nov 1, 2011
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I spent the better part of my life on two or three wheels so I’m probably not the best person to opine on this subject but if I was buying something that I wanted safety as the prime criteria. I would buy one of the Polaris Ranger 170 UTV’s. When I was looking for a full size Ranger on marketplace last year they where for sale everywhere and seemed reasonably priced.
 

greenbean.sixpack

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Oct 6, 2012
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On the first one, don't break the bank. If he uses the heck out of it and shows responsibility, you can upgrade down the road.
 

M R DAWGS

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Apr 13, 2018
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Break out the wallet and buy him a Yamaha or Honda.
 
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M R DAWGS

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Apr 13, 2018
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So I should probably preface this by saying that we don't hunt or spend a lot of time in the woods, so I'm not looking for something that can crawl through lava or that will last til the end of time.

However, I do have a couple kids that would love something to run around the yard/cove in, and I'm honestly lost. I started looking at electric options by MotoTec and Pioneer, but those things look a lot smaller than what I had in mind, and the reviews are saying that you're lucky to get 45 min on a charge. Then, I started looking at X-Pro, but by the time I got to one that looked like the right size, I was quickly getting up into the $2-3k price range.

Do y’all have any recommendations for a purely recreational ATV for a 10 year old? Also, any advice on what I should be on the lookout for in terms of quality and safety?


Suggestions have been made. What are your thoughts? You started this 17’n thread.
 

turkish

Junior
Aug 22, 2012
964
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So I should probably preface this by saying that we don't hunt or spend a lot of time in the woods, so I'm not looking for something that can crawl through lava or that will last til the end of time.

However, I do have a couple kids that would love something to run around the yard/cove in, and I'm honestly lost. I started looking at electric options by MotoTec and Pioneer, but those things look a lot smaller than what I had in mind, and the reviews are saying that you're lucky to get 45 min on a charge. Then, I started looking at X-Pro, but by the time I got to one that looked like the right size, I was quickly getting up into the $2-3k price range.

Do y’all have any recommendations for a purely recreational ATV for a 10 year old? Also, any advice on what I should be on the lookout for in terms of quality and safety?
For the neighborhood? $5M umbrella… minimum!
 

ETK99

Heisman
Jul 30, 2019
9,321
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IMG_9393.jpeg
When a profile picture fits a thread lol
Surprised I wasn't beaten to it.