stay away from kawi
I love my 06 750 bruteforce. I chipped it and put mudlite xtrs on it. Never had a problem besides changing the belt. Only thing I don't like is the diff lock is a manual lever. My dads yamaha 350 kodiak has electric diff lock, its great when your stuck and pushing the bike from the side. How I look at it is if you want the best power for your buck get a kawi(v-twin power). If you want to spend a bit more for the electric goodies I'd get the yamaha. Yamaha 550 with power stearing and 25" mudlite xtrs would be a great machine! Also the yamaha seats are compfy.
stay away from kawi

Also, I recently test drive a Polaris. Not bad and a few grands cheaper that the Japanese. Not sure what kind of reputation they have though.
My Brute also wears XTRs and has been chipped and sports a full HMF Swamp serries exhaust, etc...
I have to say though, the kawi finger diff lock is the SH!T and one main reason I love this bike so much. When your balls deep in a hole fighting for traction, grabbing the diff lock with your left finger is much easier than looking for switches. Once the front tires are up and out, simply let go of the lever and stay on the throttle. There is NO transition between open and locked, just keep riding.
The Yamaha diff lock is the hokiest of the them all. All lawyered up to the point of almost being useless. You need to come to a full stop, flip the safety cover blocking the diff lock switch over top of the 4wd selector, then push diff lock on (I'm not making this #### up). This means you need to plan ahead of when you actually require the diff lock. Stupid design. I want it when I need it and I want it off as soon as I'm done with it. The Yamaha system is electronic and not reliable, they get wet, coroded and stop working. Sometime they stop working while the front diff is locked up. A cable locker is a simple, reliable and easily serviced system.
KAWI ROCKS!!!
I gotta say i do love that the kawi diff lock system is easy to use and great for on the fly, but if i get off my bike to push it through a snow drift i don't always want both hands on the bars. I usually throttle with 1 hand and help push with the other. The Yamaha system does take time to engage at times, but i just turn it on ahead of time if i think il need it. As for reliability iv never had to fix the yamys diff lock system so i'm not sure. I love kawis and would stick with them, just though i would give my opinions on both. There are ups and downs to both. I guess i would say i like the brute for the mud because you never know when your gona get stuck in a hole. But I prefer the yamaha's diff for snow, as i'm constantly getting off to push if i bottom out.



























