wanted to add that a lot of Polaris (and a few kawasaki) units have a feature built into them. Cars as well. When you turn the key to start, it no longer has a direct connection between keyswitch and starter relay/solenoid-rather the keyswitch sends a signal to the ECU and ECU reads data from all the sensors and switches, and it then decides whether or not to allow the engine to start. In doing so, once it sees that everything is "ok", it cranks the engine and once the ECU sees X RPM (I think in the case of Polaris it wants to see 600 RPM), it assumes that the engine is running and cuts power to the solenoid/relay. You can see if your vehicle has this feature by making sure you're in neutral and all that, then turn the key to start and hold it for a split second--then release it. If it continues to crank via starter until it's running, it's ecu controlled. Almost all cars have it now (auto start/stop plays in as well....).
Kubota should ideally look at doing this on the sidekicks too. It will mean the ecu has to change as well as the wiring but it has the possibility of reducing wear on the starter motor thus reducing warranty claims costs. One other thing I'd like to see on the sidekicks is an electronic throttle valve instead of the cable driven throttle. That Robin engine is really responsive, and the combination of throttle pedal linkage ratio and having a fully mechanically activated throttle results in VERY jerky operation. ETV will solve that and make the machine MUCH more user-friendly. But Going backwards here, the Japanese are well-known for holding a particular product on the market relatively unchanged for FAR too long. Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki, Suzuki, Kubota. They all do it. Products need to change about every 5 years. The sidekicks have been out since 2018, people have been griping about certain things (throttle....) and here it is, 6 years later, or 7 model years, and they still haven't properly addressed the dangerous throttle. They had an update at one point but it really didn't do a lot. It desperately needs electronic throttle valve. For crying out loud, put a drive mode switch in it so that it can have a work mode, a standard mode, and a sport mode so that everyone can enjoy it however they please. It's a pretty good machine but it needs a few things to be competitive with the rest of the market, otherwise Kubota may as well not waste the resources trying to sell them, IMO. Move those resources into the CUT's or SCUTS and leave the SxS market to those companies who know it best.