Liquifire Lurker is all pupil and no patience – a crazed blue monster with red spiked hair, clutching the bars of a black John Deere Liquifire as it claws across a frozen swamp. Snow spray, tall pines, and that classic Deere black-and-yellow striping make this one feel like a late-night lake run gone just a little out of control.
Printed on thick, high-quality vinyl, this die-cut sticker is built to live on sled trailers, helmets, gas cans, shop fridges, toolboxes, laptops – anywhere that needs a hit of vintage-sled chaos. Strong adhesive, bold color, and crisp detail make it perfect for collectors and old-iron Deere fans. Number 2 of 12 in the Liquifire monster series.
Sticker Features:
Original Monsters on Machines “Liquifire Lurker” artwork
John Deere Liquifire 440 with blue monster rider and red spiked hair
Durable die-cut vinyl with vivid, weather-resistant inks
Great for tunnels, trailers, shop walls, man caves, and gear bags
Fun gift for vintage snowmobile and John Deere collectors
Vehicle Information – John Deere Liquifire 440
The John Deere Liquifire 440 was Deere’s performance-oriented trail sled in the late 1970s and early 1980s. At its heart is a liquid-cooled two-stroke twin in the mid-400cc class, designed for strong mid-range pull and smooth top-end speed. Twin carburetors and CDI ignition helped it light easily in cold weather and stay responsive when you hammered the throttle on long lake runs.
The chassis uses a slide-rail rear suspension and a relatively narrow stance, giving the Liquifire a planted but sporty feel compared with many leaf-spring sleds of the era. A 15-inch track with aggressive traction lugs, combined with moderate overall weight, gave it a solid power-to-weight ratio and good bite in hard-packed snow.
Styling is pure John Deere: black hood, bold yellow striping, and the leaping-deer logo on the side panels. For many riders, the Liquifire became the ultimate “fast Deere,” remembered as one of the smoothest and quickest sleds the company ever built before exiting the snowmobile market. Today, survivors are prized in vintage lineups, and a clean Liquifire always draws a crowd.