My area is the opposite. Many more light snows, and rarely deep snows. We also seem to get enough melts between snow events that worrying about making room for more and more snow clearing is not really needed.I have a broom, and it is OK for light fluffy snow, but usually when we get snow, it is a lot of it. I have used the broom to clean up after I blow the snow off the driveway, so what is left doesn't freeze and turn into ice.
They work great for clearing the leaves off the lawn!
Angling is a much better solution, I just can't find any specs on how much you can angle the BX2814 broom. Kubota is terrible at posting specs. Land Pride is amazing at posting specs. I have one fuzzy answer that the broom can angle to the point of having a 48" path, which would mean a 39 degree angle.Removing bristles is relatively easy although I do not know whether you can run it doing what you are proposing. To me it would just be easier to just power angle it one way or the other to reduce the width.
I continue to be amazed at how hard it can be to get specs on some Kubota stuff. The closest thing I can find to show the broom angle is at 0:42 in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aJouNmjbar8
Not sure if that's the maximum angle in the video, but it doesn't seem like the broom is any less wide at that angle. You can see the bristles have near 1ft of contact width, so when you rotate the broom, you're rotating a 1x5ft rectangle.
A couple spots in that video, you see the broom casting a cloud of snow 15+ feet up into the air. That is not what I want (maybe it was really windy?). Any reason the broom can't be run at lower rpm's?
I'm really struggling to understand if the 60" broom can feasibly be used on 60" sidewalks. In many areas, I think it will be fine. In other areas, there are issues like small (6-12" high) retaining walls right up at the edge of the sidewalk. That would mean for the sweeper to safely pass by, I'd be off the other edge, possibly hitting grass or other landscaping.The broom is in sections, 31 poly or 15 steel, but it would not be logical or easy to remove one or more sections of the broom.
It's not only the bristles of the broom, but the frame for the broom that could hinder your use anywhere near a 12" rise.I'm really struggling to understand if the 60" broom can feasibly be used on 60" sidewalks. In many areas, I think it will be fine. In other areas, there are issues like small (6-12" high) retaining walls right up at the edge of the sidewalk. That would mean for the sweeper to safely pass by, I'd be off the other edge, possibly hitting grass or other landscaping.