Hardline Products supplies snowmobile accessories and snowmobile equipment built for the demands of cold-weather riding. From registration decals that stay legible at 30 below to RX cleaning products that lift road grime, salt, and trail muck without damaging vinyl wraps, our sled catalog covers the sub-categories most owners need every season.
Sled owners face a different test list than the rest of the powersports world. Salt, road slush, sub-zero starts, vibration on rough trails, and hard storage cycles all attack accessories that weren’t designed for the climate. Our snowmobile gear deals on registration decals, cleaners, and accessories use materials and adhesives that hold up through long winters and through the freeze-thaw cycles that destroy generic vinyl.
Our snowmobile decals are printed on vinyl that stays flexible at sub-zero temperatures, so they bend with the tunnel and hood without cracking. The adhesive backing is rated to bond at low temperatures, which matters when you’re decaling a sled in an unheated garage in January. Our snowmobile cleaner formulas are tested on tunnel paint, hood plastic, windshield acrylic, and seat vinyl, so they lift salt and trail muck without etching the surfaces underneath. Owners who run year-round in salt-treated states report longer-lasting decals and less seasonal touch-up work after switching to Hardline Products®.
Owners shop our snowmobile accessories for four core needs:
Registration and titling: snowmobile registration numbers required by your state, printed on vinyl that holds up to road salt and constant freeze-thaw exposure. Our number sets are sized to the most common state specs.
Off-season storage prep: cleaning the sled before it goes under cover for spring and summer, and pulling stains out of plastic and vinyl before they set. The off-season prep cycle is where most long-term sled value is preserved.
Mid-season refresh: replacement snowmobile decals when registration numbers fade, peel, or get scraped off in tight tree riding. Stocking a backup set saves a delayed weekend.
Race and rally prep: numbered decals and clean surfaces for vintage runs, hill climbs, and oval events. Our cold-rated vinyl applies cleanly even in event-paddock conditions.
Start with registration. Confirm your state’s snowmobile registration number requirements (size, color contrast, location) and order vinyl numbers that match. Add the RX cleaning kit you’ll use for end-of-season storage prep, and stock a backup set of decals for mid-season replacement. If you store the sled at a cabin or remote garage, plan an extra cleaning kit for that location. Owners with multiple sleds (family fleets, club operators) should standardize on one decal style and one cleaning kit so reorders are simple.
Dealers and outfitters carrying snowmobile parts online can contact us for wholesale terms on registration kits and cleaning supplies.
Sled ownership runs on a two-cycle calendar. The pre-season cycle (typically October or early November) covers registration renewal, replacement decals, fresh belts, and a deep clean from the prior summer’s storage. The post-season cycle (typically March or April) covers a full salt and grime wash, a vinyl and plastic protectant pass, and a final inspection before the sled goes under cover. Owners who build those two reorder cycles into their calendar see fewer mid-season surprises, longer-lasting decals, and better resale numbers when it’s time to upgrade.
If you store your sled in a garage, an unheated barn, or a trailer, the off-season is when the most damage happens. Salt and trail muck left on the tunnel turn into permanent staining over the summer. Vinyl seats baked under a tarp without a protectant cracks at the seams. The single biggest return on a snowmobile cleaner and protectant kit is preventing those summer storage failures. Plan a 30-minute cleaning pass before storage, and your sled will look (and resell) like a machine with half its actual mileage.