I bought em, used them once, then never again. Unless the gravel is frozen hard, the skid shoes dig in and are worthless. I just turn my blade around backwards and it works perfectly to remove snow without moving gravel.So I ended up buying a rear blade to use for snow removal on a gravel driveway. With not skid shoes on there will I just end up tearing up the gravel? Are these a must have?
Thanks
Replacing the metal edge with a rubber edge will also reduce the amount of gravel and grass that you tear up but it will also leave a base that can turn to ice with temperature fluctuations.
Reversing the blade also works well on unfrozen gravel.I am new to compact tractors and happy using the rear blade facing backward to move snow on paved driveway without damage, I would imagine it would be fine on frozen gravel
I can see how a pair of regular disc shoes would dig in to gravel.I bought em, used them once, then never again. Unless the gravel is frozen hard, the skid shoes dig in and are worthless. I just turn my blade around backwards and it works perfectly to remove snow without moving gravel.
Those seem pretty good for a bucket and something like that got a front mounted blade would be great. For a rear blade the solution is free: just reverse the moldboard.I can see how a pair of regular disc shoes would dig in to gravel.
I use a pair of these on my bucket, and they don't dig in. Work great. Might be something like this available for a blade.
View attachment 92592
You do understand, they are reversing the blade and driving forward, not in reverse.I am new to compact tractors and happy using the rear blade facing backward to move snow on paved driveway without damage, I would imagine it would be fine on frozen gravel
Oh, yeah, I forgot about the angling.@Mark_BX25D I can tell you from my JD X585 days that the long narrow shoes are infinitely worse than the mushroom shoes when angling a blade on gravel.
I haven’t found any skid shoes that work on gravel unless the gravel is frozen solid. The reversed blade is the best option. For a forward plow, maybe not dropping the blade all the way and leave a few inches of snow. Skid shoes are designed for hard surfaces such as asphalt or concrete. In gravel, they just cut two trenches and then the blade sinks in and scrapes the gravel.Oh, yeah, I forgot about the angling.
Sounds like a great plan!In gravel, they just cut two trenches and then the blade sinks in and scrapes the gravel.
Those look like they will bend quite easily. The ones on the Kubota plows are 5/8" solid steel uprights and each one weighs about 8-10 pounds. Heavy washers are how you set the height by sacking them on the shaft before inserting them into the holder on the plow and a linchpin at the top.I bought these. They were cheap enough that I don't mind spending $15.50 for the experiment. I have them mounted but have not had an opportunity to try them out yet.
I don't think that they will bend too easily. I attached a picture of one side and how it is mounted. They fit close to the bucket in a position that allows me to have the piranha tooth bar mounted without interference. The tooth bar is not mounted in this picture. I think that they will allow me to be able to push snow without tearing up the driveway and grass. They are also tight enough to the bucket that they should not bend. Also, they should not interfere with any other work that I do with the bucket so I should be able to leave them mounted permanently.Those look like they will bend quite easily. The ones on the Kubota plows are 5/8" solid steel uprights and each one weighs about 8-10 pounds. Heavy washers are how you set the height by sacking them on the shaft before inserting them into the holder on the plow and a linchpin at the top.