muttbarker
Member
Equipment
Kubota L4060 HST, Snowblower, FEL, Rear Blade, 60" Grapple, 6' Bush Hog, Forks
Still very much a neophyte when it comes to tractors, snow, country living, etc. My wife is always telling me I should go to tractor school and I try and explain that OTT is as good as it gets when it comes to learning. So yet another dumb'ish type question. I have a L4060 with a L4479 - 74" front mounted snowblower. This is year #2 with it. Last year was a real trial as I learned things when it it stops blowing snow you probably broke a shear pin and that following the maintenance guidelines helps ward off issues like having a chain to loose to turn the auger.
Having said that - last year was a really light year in Northern Utah in terms of snow. This year is very different. We just came off an epic storm that dumped multiple feet in a 24 hour period. I have to blow a ¾ mile driveway and the average depth was 24" - 36" - I went into this running the blower right at it and the auger would jam quite quickly, sometimes within two or three minutes. So my shear pin supply was rapidly depleted. After hitting my head against the proverbial wall a bunch of times I came up with the idea of doing multiple passes, each time just taking off about 12" - 16" of snow. Took 2 to 3 times longer and I had a nice base of ground in snow which I will go back and clean up at some point with my rear blade, but I did the whole drive without breaking a shear pin.
So, a couple questions:
1. Does anyone have a favor spray to help snow from sticking - I use Ariens Sno Jet non-stick spray as it seems to work on the blower I use at my house. But it does not do anything on the wet stuff at my ranch.
2. Is the approach I took the most effective? How do you handle large amounts of snow at once. The blower has a working height of 26" so in hindsight trying to clear 3 feet is just asking for trouble.
3. What about when the snow is very heavy and wet. One of our local mountains reported getting 56" of snow with a water content equal to 100" - so that has to be impactful to say the least.
I just have to say that I LOVE this site. I really appreciate the knowledge shared by all of you "old timers" and also the humor that seems to eventually make its way into any long thread. I did a post on taking down beavers and it went "south" in a good way with a lot of funny comments and suggestions.
Thanks,
Kevin Barker
Having said that - last year was a really light year in Northern Utah in terms of snow. This year is very different. We just came off an epic storm that dumped multiple feet in a 24 hour period. I have to blow a ¾ mile driveway and the average depth was 24" - 36" - I went into this running the blower right at it and the auger would jam quite quickly, sometimes within two or three minutes. So my shear pin supply was rapidly depleted. After hitting my head against the proverbial wall a bunch of times I came up with the idea of doing multiple passes, each time just taking off about 12" - 16" of snow. Took 2 to 3 times longer and I had a nice base of ground in snow which I will go back and clean up at some point with my rear blade, but I did the whole drive without breaking a shear pin.
So, a couple questions:
1. Does anyone have a favor spray to help snow from sticking - I use Ariens Sno Jet non-stick spray as it seems to work on the blower I use at my house. But it does not do anything on the wet stuff at my ranch.
2. Is the approach I took the most effective? How do you handle large amounts of snow at once. The blower has a working height of 26" so in hindsight trying to clear 3 feet is just asking for trouble.
3. What about when the snow is very heavy and wet. One of our local mountains reported getting 56" of snow with a water content equal to 100" - so that has to be impactful to say the least.
I just have to say that I LOVE this site. I really appreciate the knowledge shared by all of you "old timers" and also the humor that seems to eventually make its way into any long thread. I did a post on taking down beavers and it went "south" in a good way with a lot of funny comments and suggestions.
Thanks,
Kevin Barker