ve9aa
Well-known member
Equipment
TG1860, BX2380 -backblade, bx2830 snowblower, fel, weight box,pallet forks,etc
Big fan of snowblowers here in New Brunswick, Canada. For where I live (up on top of a hilly ridge) we get our fair share of snow...maybe even "more than our fair share, lol"
I estimate I use my 48" commercial blower close to 90% of the time. HOWEVER, there are times when we get a mix of weather in a short time span when other tools are needed. Today was one of those times. In the last week we've had snow (lots!), rain, freezing rain, ice pellets, wind, drifting snow, and probably other stuff I've forgotten. It's been as warm as 11*C (52*F) and as cold as -14*C (7*F) just in the last 7-10 days.
After I do any snow cleanup, there has always been "something else" come along, usually when I am at work.
It's starting to snow again today (and will off/on for the next 30 hrs) and in prep, I used the BACK BLADE to carve out the sides of my driveway (and other areas not shown in these pix) because drifted snow with rain on top has frozen them into essentially almost solid ice (not quite-but you get the idea). The snowblower (which works fantastic!) won't touch these curved areas where snow has drifted. Just rides up on top of it all. It's so icy out there now....30mins after I took these pix we have maybe 1/2" of powder on top of all this ICE. Everything you are looking at it frozen solid. You almost cannot stand up it's so slick. I did about a 90* "drift" with the tractor a few times...this with a blower, a back bade, and tire chains in 4WD - LO
If you're in the southern tier States , S. Pacific, S. EU/AF, AUS/NZ./...thank your lucky stars you don't have to deal with this stuff. OFten , I don't get to choose WHEN I deal with it, but today, being the weekend, I went out after morning coffee and so it was a good bit of fun !
(3 days ago we got nearly a foot of wet stuff and I was out in the dark, at -6*C(21*F) and it was super windy, beating me in the face with cold snow--ugh.,...a cab would've been nice with a bit of heat and some AC/DC cranked up for tunes!)
p.s.-make fun if you want, but I park my back blade on the edge of my parking lot on 3 old rims/tires. I've found even if I bump them while snowblowing (because I can't see them) usually I won't hurt a thing. Tires, side of blowers, whatever. The tires remain moderately supple even in the middle of winter (there's no air in them) I did have a pallet out there, but all I did was break it--many times !
I estimate I use my 48" commercial blower close to 90% of the time. HOWEVER, there are times when we get a mix of weather in a short time span when other tools are needed. Today was one of those times. In the last week we've had snow (lots!), rain, freezing rain, ice pellets, wind, drifting snow, and probably other stuff I've forgotten. It's been as warm as 11*C (52*F) and as cold as -14*C (7*F) just in the last 7-10 days.
After I do any snow cleanup, there has always been "something else" come along, usually when I am at work.
It's starting to snow again today (and will off/on for the next 30 hrs) and in prep, I used the BACK BLADE to carve out the sides of my driveway (and other areas not shown in these pix) because drifted snow with rain on top has frozen them into essentially almost solid ice (not quite-but you get the idea). The snowblower (which works fantastic!) won't touch these curved areas where snow has drifted. Just rides up on top of it all. It's so icy out there now....30mins after I took these pix we have maybe 1/2" of powder on top of all this ICE. Everything you are looking at it frozen solid. You almost cannot stand up it's so slick. I did about a 90* "drift" with the tractor a few times...this with a blower, a back bade, and tire chains in 4WD - LO
If you're in the southern tier States , S. Pacific, S. EU/AF, AUS/NZ./...thank your lucky stars you don't have to deal with this stuff. OFten , I don't get to choose WHEN I deal with it, but today, being the weekend, I went out after morning coffee and so it was a good bit of fun !
(3 days ago we got nearly a foot of wet stuff and I was out in the dark, at -6*C(21*F) and it was super windy, beating me in the face with cold snow--ugh.,...a cab would've been nice with a bit of heat and some AC/DC cranked up for tunes!)
p.s.-make fun if you want, but I park my back blade on the edge of my parking lot on 3 old rims/tires. I've found even if I bump them while snowblowing (because I can't see them) usually I won't hurt a thing. Tires, side of blowers, whatever. The tires remain moderately supple even in the middle of winter (there's no air in them) I did have a pallet out there, but all I did was break it--many times !