Yesterday I called around to my local Yamaha dealers and finally found one to go look at. A 2004 Big Bear, 4x4, manual trans, etc. Apparently this is a very popular unit as most dealers are out of stock.
I found this to be a good solid, but no frills, 4 wheeler. True to Yamaha tradition it was well built and a good performer. I tried it out in the sand lot next to the dealership and found it to have much power and was very agile in either 2 or 4 wheel drive. I didn't notice any difficulty in steering when in 4 WD that is common with some other brands. In 2 WD the scooter had no problem in the loose sand, inclines, etc. but the sand was not real bad and there was no mud so I could not really test it capabilities.
I did notice it is geared very very low. You barely moved in first before you wanted to shift to second gear. I could speed up and shift thru all gears in a very short distance. Would have liked to be able to take it up to top speed but couldn't. Dealer said top speed is 53mph so that is OK. It seems they geared it very low to be more of a work horse rather than a pleasure riding machine. I could take off in the sand in second gear with no problem even third gear take offs were fairly easy.
The unit handles well, steers easy, rides good (best I could tell) but lacks bells and whistles. It has a analog speedometer which I thought for the money should have been a digital gauge pack. The scooter had lots of power. Overall I was impressed as this model fits my traditionist prefferences well. Maybe later I will regret not buying one of the automatic trans models but for me the manual trans model gives me the most confidence of durability.
I would have bought that scooter if I hadn't seen their 16 year old store clean up guy washing all of the new 4 wheelers on the outdoor display. I stood there and watched him wash this bike and spray a hard stream of water continuously up into all of the switches and controls on the handle bars. Maybe I am being over reactive but I don't do that to any of my things and think that action would have to force moisture into the switches and controls and shorten its life. Hopefully the switches have rubber moisture guards in them but I won't take that chance. I am very careful with water when washing and cleaning. It seems to pay off as I have never had any trouble or failure like that. Too bad the dealer didn't take a few minutes to teach the young kid how to wash and properly care for these machines.
What I would like to have/add/change on this bike would be add an attractive functional digital gauge pack, change to a single lever "reverse gear" shifter, change to a more standard gearing ratio.
Dave1