Plowed about 4" of HEAVY WET white stuff yesterday. Sure was nice to be in a heated cab out of the weather
Same here. Sick of it. Round 3 tomorrow. I friggin' hate snow.Round 2 of snow removal. Much nicer since it was 20 and the snow just blew off me. Ended up with another 8” of dry snow but with it came drifts up to 3’. Lots more bucket work and less blade work. Took me a bit over 2.5 hrs to get it cleared off. Snowing hard again so we’ll see what we have to deal with tomorrow. Really wishing I would have staked the driveway edges. Rookie mistake that I will not make next fall
I’m heading out shortly too to snowblow, we got 11”Heading out for the first round of plowing; 8-10" on the ground with more still falling.
We got another 3-4' overnight and no snow today. Nice to see the sun out there. Our problem is the drifting. It's breezy today so my driveway cut has most likely packed in. Have a Dr appt in town so I need to dig out around lunch. Personally I love winter. Grew up in the snow belt of Ohio and actually enjoy shoveling. On a positive side, I can get back in the woods since the ground is frozen up. Negative side, I can't see any of my rounds to pull them out and if I could, I have to break them free of the frozen ground first.Same here. Sick of it. Round 3 tomorrow. I friggin' hate snow.
This is the first time in 3yrs that I could have used chains and I have ag tires. Leaving a small layer of snow on top of the frozen gravel for traction. I’ll also offset my rear blade by 6-8” to keep my wheels out of the deep stuff. Now to choose the cigar of the day to go along with plowing.Snow is just wrapping up here at 10 am Tuesday. We got somewhere between 26"-30". I had some difficulty getting traction last night with the R4's. Snow was pretty sticky underneath.
I got a bit chilled at lunch when I did a couple quick passes but didn't dress appropriately. Will put on my insulated carharts and heavy boots when I go out in a couple hours. I was hoping the bright sun would solidify the loose snow, but no such luck since it is only 20 out. Got the drive opened but by the time I returned it was partially filled back in. I think I'm gonna have to get up before the wife leaves and do it again for her to get to workDid my plowing this morning but only around 6" here. For those removing snow without cabs, I highly recommend Helly Hansen outerwear. A couple years ago, after wondering if I'd be able to feel parts of my legs again, I bit the bullet and got some pants and a jacket. They aren't cheap but worth every penny when you are working out in the snow for extended periods of time.
6 more weeks according to that Phil chapSame here. Sick of it. Round 3 tomorrow. I friggin' hate snow.
I usually do pretty meticulous work, but it never dawned on me to open up the carb and make sure it was clean behind the metering pump and reed valves. It was NOT. I know the lines were clean (brand new) and had a new filter, and a new primer bulb, so nothing could have gotten from the tank into the carburetor after I did the repairs it needed. It ran, so I know I put the lines in properly, filter to carb pump inlet, discharge to primer bulb, and primer bulb return to tank, otherwise I'd be wearing more fuel that I burned in the engine. The little saw ran like a scalded dog for about 20 minutes, not including the time I spent setting the jets, at which point it completely plugged itself up with crud deposited by a fuel line with no filter (installed by the idiots I sent it to for repairs). I suspect both jets are now fouled as well as nearly every galley in the carb. I thought I ran out of fuel because I didn't start with a full tank and I'm used to wasting nearly as much as I use with that saw. Removed the cap to put more in, and uh oh, it's still half full, and had no reason to have quit. I don't think it ran that good when it was brand new. Sweet idle with no chain movement, good jump to full throttle, and HOGGED through some 14" water oak that's been cut about 8 weeks, cutting WITH the grain and using the WHOLE bar to split it. Primer bulb circulates fuel just fine, but it ain't making it past the metering pump in the carb. GRRRRRRR. I shoulda grabbed one of the kits that included a carb. But I saved about $4 by not doing that. DOH!!! But, I did get some more relevant work done for the 'bota and WC-68. Some of it's just too big to feed to the chipper, though, and makes LOUSY firewood. I don't have a fireplace, but do intend to put a little wood stove that belonged to my mom in the shed I plan to build. I split a lot of wood for that thing when I was in high school.It wasn't on or to my LX2610, but it is sort of remotely related, kinda like the sister-in-law's best friend's second cousin twice removed.....