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Except it needs a flywheel for the electric start on it. And the thing is, it's a big heavy 500, and it doesn't have a compression release. So to pull it over, I mean, it takes a giant of a man to pull it over. My brother-in-law couldn't do it. His dad couldn't do it. The only one that could pull it over was my brother-in-law's brother. So he has no use for it. He has other bikes, and he's got no use for trying to pull that thing over to start it. So yeah, it's a perfect running quad. That's the same exact year, make and model of the one I have. So any parts goes anything from a button to a headlight bulb to tires. It has everything. So very happy about that. This thing has 27-inch tires on the back and 25-inch mud to the front. So the tires that are on it are in good shape. The claw marks on them and everything are still good. They're older tires, but they all still hold air, and they're good and reliable. So the winch on the front of mine doesn't work, but the winch on the one I'm getting does. So I can just replace that. And the seat on the one I'm getting does have a couple of tears in it as well as the seat that I've got, my current one. So I've got the material there to fix that, that adhesive leather stuff, and get it all fixed up and looking good. So yeah, I'm happy about that. That all happened on Friday evening because I had my mom hold on to the money that I had. So it would all be there when I needed it. And I went up and I got the money off my mom Friday night at like 9 o'clock. And at 9 o'clock, she was gone. And it's crazy because she was fine when I talked to her on Friday evening when I was up and got the money for the bike and all that. And then in the middle of the night, she just passed away. So it was extremely sudden, too sudden. But we've got it all taken care of now. She's back home with us. We've got her in an urn upstairs at my father's place. And she didn't want any funerals or services or public viewings or any of that. She made that very clear. Ever since she's had the cancer, she said that. She didn't want to be put on display. So we followed her wishes. And it went a lot smoother, I think, for the whole family as well than not have to go through the church service and the burial and all of that, too. So that was a good decision. I'm donating my body to science when I go to the university. They have a college of physicians over there. And they're always needing cadavers. So I said, if I can help someone become a new good doctor, then I'm all for it. And that way, my family doesn't have to worry about burying me or cremate me or any of that stuff. When they're finished with you, they'll cremate you and either return your ashes or spread them over the ocean, which is what I wanted anyway to be spread over the ocean.
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