SRG,That thing looks awesome. You said it was a 6ft out of 5/16"? That lower long triangle gusset, is it open on the bottom, or closed up so nothing can stay built up under it? I hope you get to use it, it looks impressive for sure!
Generally speaking, I think a blower is the best all-round snow removal tool. It picks up the snow, hurls it some distance away and piles it high, all in one pass. Deep snow just means slower travel speed, not more back-and-forth. No need to drive through un-removed snow, no plow rows to freeze hard and immobile.Ok Guys, I am getting owned by snow. Seattle Just received record snow fall. For some of you its just another day, but here, It brung everything to a halt. We have very heavy wet snow. And so far, the bx25 is no match for it. It doesnt have the weight, or power to hammer through it. I just spin and bog down. The only tools I have are a landscape rake and the front loader. With that said, should I look at a blower, rear blade, or front plow blade for future work? I would also like to know if the bx is feasible to use for light snow removal work for hire.
This is great news, back to the drawing board when it gets warmer. Any chance you could overnight me up a set, think I'm gonna need them today.I did some serious digging into my bare stone driveway last night and today. Wet and icy stuff.
My UHMWP shoe liners are still there!
Like eipo said, they’re pretty slick. They helped by digging in less, and I’m amazed at how tough they are. Thought I certainly tore one off once, but it was still there.
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Will a blade spill slow or just old it? I was hoping my rake would have wind rowed the snow but it didnt. Of coarse this was more like dirt than snow since it was so heavy.Generally speaking, I think a blower is the best all-round snow removal tool. It picks up the snow, hurls it some distance away and piles it high, all in one pass. Deep snow just means slower travel speed, not more back-and-forth. No need to drive through un-removed snow, no plow rows to freeze hard and immobile.
That said, wet snow is the blower's nemesis. Slush doesn't throw very far and packing snow clogs chutes. In urban environments, it may be difficult to avoid piling the snow on a neighbour's property. Gravel throws almost as readily as snow. And blowers are expensive -- front mount blowers doubly so -- and require more maintenance.
Given that you already have a loader and that your area does not typically receive heavy snow falls, your best option might be to add a rear blade (one that can rotate 180°) and some traction aids like WW filled tires and chains. And possibly a snow bucket for the loader.
But that's just my 2¢. Worth every penny of it.
How readily the plow spills depends on a couple of factors.Will a blade spill slow or just old it? I was hoping my rake would have wind rowed the snow but it didnt. Of coarse this was more like dirt than snow since it was so heavy.
bear - I'd send you at set if a had them! (Hmm...Maybe that could be a side business along with my chicken wing sauce when I retire.....)This is great news, back to the drawing board when it gets warmer. Any chance you could overnight me up a set, think I'm gonna need them today.
Beautiful country, lot's of drifting there.Another 2 hrs today clearing out down to the hangar. This snow is so windpacked it set up like concrete, unbelievably heavy also. With these heaped up buckets it was making my (filled) rear tires a bit light, and that's with the snow thrower on! I didn't realize how heavy until I picked up a couple big clumps, and that made me feel a bit better anyway as to how the L3301 was really having to work to move it. My nearest neighbor needed a D-6 dozer and several hours to clear his drive, so I'm not complaining I guess.
I actually thought about getting the U-25 mini excavator out of its winter storage, with its 30" cleanout bucket, but it was in the hangar so couldn't get to it until I didn't need it.
Nice pictures, what do you drive?Hauling snow for the city right now. Not Kubota's but this is how we handle snow, LOL.
Actually there is a sea of orange in my city now. Almost every plow contractor has Kubota's now. Everything from B2650 cabs with blowers to RTV's to an M7.
Tractors have really caught on all of a sudden.