I see a lot of badly maintained old and abused walk behind blowers. They are given no maintenance, left outside all summer and then expected to work in cold, harsh conditions, which in my experience they generally do.
It is not that expensive to rebuild a front gearbox on one, the gear is brass/bronze and is potentially a sacrificial item to save the main gear and shaft.
I owned an allied rear blower, built like a battleship and had a gearbox and external chain drive, you still needed to lubricate the chain, the nylon tensioning roller needed some work and so did the gearbox. You could still break a shear pin and there was alway the chance of it not breaking and the rear PTO taking a hit, now that I would think is some work.
I think they are heavier in part to stop them lifting when backing into banks, I know my B 2301 has no rear down pressure so dead weight is the main factor in operation.
I think most of the statements made by the original poster are scare mongering.
Keep calm and snow blow anyway.
It is not that expensive to rebuild a front gearbox on one, the gear is brass/bronze and is potentially a sacrificial item to save the main gear and shaft.
I owned an allied rear blower, built like a battleship and had a gearbox and external chain drive, you still needed to lubricate the chain, the nylon tensioning roller needed some work and so did the gearbox. You could still break a shear pin and there was alway the chance of it not breaking and the rear PTO taking a hit, now that I would think is some work.
I think they are heavier in part to stop them lifting when backing into banks, I know my B 2301 has no rear down pressure so dead weight is the main factor in operation.
I think most of the statements made by the original poster are scare mongering.
Keep calm and snow blow anyway.