A wide, 135-hp turbo sport UTV with long-travel suspension built to stay planted in sand and fast trails.
The Maverick X3 line has a lot of overlap, so it’s easy to pay for the wrong trim. The RS Turbo keeps the full-size X3 stance and travel, then pairs it with a 135-hp Rotax ACE 900 cc turbo triple. You get a playful powerband, Smart-Lok traction, and a chassis that likes speed, without stepping into the 200-hp RR price tier.
Below you’ll find the stuff buyers ask after the test ride: what the numbers mean once you’re off the lot, what to inspect on a used unit, and the habits that keep belts, filters, and suspension parts from eating your budget.
Who The RS Turbo Fits Best
This trim suits riders who spend time in dunes, desert, and open trail systems where a 72-inch chassis feels natural. It also works for owners who want to add a few targeted upgrades over time rather than buying every premium option up front.
If your riding is mostly tight woods with narrow gates and constant low-speed turns, the X3’s width and wheelbase can feel like work. If you like long sight lines, rolling chop, and whoops, the RS Turbo starts making sense fast.
Can-Am Maverick X3 RS Turbo Setup Checks Before First Ride
New or used, do one garage session before you hit dirt. It keeps the first ride fun and it can stop a small issue from turning into a tow.
Set Your Seating And Controls
Slide the seat so your elbows stay slightly bent at full lock and your feet reach the pedals without stretching. Then latch the door nets and seat belt and make sure nothing binds. A net that won’t latch cleanly gets old on rough ground.
Set Tire Pressure With A Gauge
The RS Turbo comes with 30-inch XPS Trac Force tires. Pressure that feels fine on pavement can feel harsh in chop. Set pressures for your surface and load, then recheck when the tires cool.
Learn The Smart-Lok Modes
The lockable front differential with Smart-Lok gives you 2WD plus multiple 4WD behaviors. Spend a few minutes with the mode descriptions so you know what you’re asking the front end to do when grip changes. Use the Can-Am Owner’s Manual library to pull the operator guide for your exact year.
Powertrain Feel In Plain English
The 135-hp turbo triple delivers clean pull that builds speed in a predictable way. It won’t hit like a 200-hp RR, yet it’s plenty for sand climbs, passing, and holding speed across rolling terrain.
Drive feel also depends on the CVT. The RS Turbo uses a pDrive primary clutch and QRS-X CVT. A fresh belt and clean clutches feel crisp. A glazed belt or dusty sheaves feel lazy and hot. That’s why belt inspection is a habit, not a once-a-season event.
Suspension And Handling Basics
The RS Turbo runs 20 inches of front travel and 22 inches of rear travel with SHOWA HPG Piggyback 2.5 shocks, per the factory spec sheet. Those numbers set the ceiling for how much chop the car can swallow, but setup decides the feel: spring preload, shock adjustments (where equipped), and sway bar health.
The listed 102-inch wheelbase calms the car at speed and through whoops. It also needs room for switchbacks. In tight spots, steer with small inputs and let the chassis settle instead of sawing at the wheel.
RS Turbo Versus Turbo RR In Daily Use
Shoppers often bounce between the RS Turbo and the RR trims because the bodies look similar. The day-to-day difference is less about bragging rights and more about how you ride. If your rides include long wide-open pulls and you chase top speed across big dunes, the extra horsepower of an RR can feel addictive. If your rides mix sand with tighter trail segments, the 135-hp RS Turbo is easier to manage for long days without feeling like you’re constantly taming the throttle.
Cost shows up after the purchase too. Higher-output builds can run hotter, stress belts more, and reward stricter service habits. The RS Turbo still needs care, yet it tends to feel less demanding when you’re learning the platform, carrying passengers, or lending the machine to friends and family.
Factory Specs That Matter On The Trail
Ads love peak horsepower, yet a few numbers decide daily life: width for trail access, travel for ride quality, dry weight for towing, and fuel capacity for range. The table below pairs the factory listings with what they change once you’re riding.
| Spec | Factory Listing | What It Changes In Real Use |
|---|---|---|
| Engine output | 135 hp, Rotax ACE 900 cc turbo triple | Strong midrange pull for dunes and fast trails, with less cost than 200-hp trims. |
| Transmission | pDrive + QRS-X CVT (L/H/N/R/P) | Fresh belt and clean clutches keep engagement sharp and reduce heat. |
| Drive system | Smart-Lok lockable front diff, 2WD/4WD modes | Run 2WD for light steering, then add front bite for loose climbs and deep sand. |
| Front travel | 20 in. (50.8 cm) | Helps the nose stay stable over chop; setup affects turn-in and braking dive. |
| Rear travel | 22 in. (55.9 cm) | Rear compliance over whoops; worn bushings show up as clunks and rear steer. |
| Width | 72.4 in. (183.9 cm) | Stability at speed; also decides what trails, gates, and trailers you can use. |
| Wheelbase | 102 in. (259.1 cm) | Smoother at speed; needs more room in tight trailheads and switchbacks. |
| Estimated dry weight | 1,673 lb (758.9 kg) | Affects towing, braking, and how fast the car sinks in soft sand with gear aboard. |
| Fuel capacity | 10.5 gal (40 L) | Sets range; plan fuel for long dune sessions and high-speed runs. |
For the full one-page list of factory specs, use the 2025 Maverick X3 RS Turbo spec sheet.
Buying Used Without Regret
Used RS Turbos can be a smart buy, but inspection matters. Many live in sand, which is easy on the chassis and hard on belts, clutches, and filters. Others see lots of mud and water, which shows up later as bearing noise and electrical glitches.
Ask For Service Proof
Receipts beat stories. Look for oil and filter history, belt changes, and notes on drivetrain fluids. If the seller has nothing, price the machine as if you’ll do a full baseline service.
Check The CVT Area
If the seller allows, pull the cover. Look for piles of belt dust, burnt smell, or chewed belt edges. Those signs mean you should budget for a belt and a clutch cleanout.
Check Suspension Play
Lift each corner and test for play at 12/6 and 3/9 on the tire. Then look for shock oil film and damaged boots. On a long-travel car, small wear can feel big at speed.
Maintenance Habits That Keep Ride Days Intact
Turbo sport machines ask for clean air, clean fluids, and quick checks that catch small issues early. Use the official Can-Am maintenance info page to pull the schedule for your model year.
Pre-Ride Checks
- Walk around for fresh leaks, loose wiring, torn boots, or missing clips.
- Inspect the air filter and seal the box correctly after service.
- Clear debris from CVT intake and exhaust paths.
- Test brakes on a slow roll and listen for grinding.
- Recheck lug nuts after wheel swaps or hard impacts.
Post-Ride Checks
Rinse suspension and skid areas, let it dry, then scan for new rub marks and loose fasteners. Recheck tire pressure once the tires cool, then park it clean so the next inspection is quick.
| Task | When To Do It | What It Prevents |
|---|---|---|
| Inspect CVT drive belt | Often; always before long trips | Belt failures, heat, and inconsistent engagement under load. |
| Clean or replace air filter | Often in dust or sand | Grit wear on turbo engine parts and reduced boost response. |
| Check coolant level and hoses | Before hot-weather rides | Overheating from small seeping connections. |
| Inspect brake pads and rotors | Regularly | Metal-on-metal damage and longer stops. |
| Retorque chassis fasteners | After early hours; then on a schedule | Loose parts, rattles, and accelerated wear at suspension points. |
| Change drivetrain fluids | Per your model-year schedule | Gear and bearing wear in the front drive and rear gearbox. |
| Grease pivot points | Regularly | Bushing wear, squeaks, and binding through the travel. |
Upgrades That Earn Their Space
Start with what keeps you riding: spares, protection, and storage that doesn’t interfere with airflow.
Carry A Spare Belt And Tools
Belts are wear items. Keep a spare in a sealed bag with the tools needed to open the cover and swap it. Practice the swap at home once.
Protect The Underside For Your Terrain
The 2025 spec sheet lists an HMWPE full skid plate. Treat it as a wearable part. Inspect it after rough rides and replace it before it gets thin.
Plan Storage With Intent
The RS Turbo lists 2.5 gallons of storage. Use tight, low-profile bags that won’t rattle or block vents. Pack a tow strap, tire plug kit, and a small first-aid kit.
Loading, Trailering, And Garage Fit
Factory dimensions list 132 inches long and 72.4 inches wide. Measure your trailer between fenders, your ramp clearance, and your tie-down points. Measure your garage door opening too. The numbers on paper beat guesswork.
Quick Checklist For A Confident Buy
- Confirm 72.4-inch width works for your trails, gates, and trailer.
- Price in a baseline service if there’s no service history.
- Inspect belt dust, smell, and seal condition in the CVT area.
- Test Smart-Lok behavior on dirt and feel the change in front bite.
- Check each wheel for play and each shock for seepage.
If you build your setup around stability, travel, and usable turbo power, the RS Turbo can be a clean, durable sport rig that stays fun to own.
References & Sources
- BRP Can-Am.“2025 Maverick X3 RS Turbo Spec Sheet.”Factory specs for engine, suspension, dimensions, and capacities used in the tables.
- BRP Can-Am.“Maverick X3 Model Lineup (Current Model Year).”Places the RS Turbo within the current Maverick X3 range and lists core features.
- BRP Can-Am.“Can-Am Off-Road Owner’s Manual Library.”Model-year operator guides for drive mode descriptions and operating details.
- BRP Can-Am.“Maintenance Information.”Model-specific maintenance schedules and service resources.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.