We just got about 20” of heavy wet snow, and it was just about raining slush, with high 30’s temps expected. This is terrible conditions for using the snow blower. It would definitely clog and blow shear pins regularly.
Using my little BX25D, with a front hydraulic blade and a rear QD blade at a 45 degree to scrape the road and clear off to the side. Keeping the front blade angled but about 2-3” on the ground, it pushes the majority of the snow off, the read blade only having a few inches to move, scrapes it easily, without clogging up.
Using one blade or the other, this heavy wet snow pushed the little BX around, but with both blades on the ground, it gives me a much longer foot print, and really plants the tractor to the road.
Most of the time in early season, it’s cold and dry snow, and I only use the blower. These are similar to March warming conditions with snow overnight and rain during the day.
Unfortunately you must clear the slop, or it freezes in ridges and makes future snow removal harder, and terrible road conditions. The double blade system work well in these conditions.
Using my little BX25D, with a front hydraulic blade and a rear QD blade at a 45 degree to scrape the road and clear off to the side. Keeping the front blade angled but about 2-3” on the ground, it pushes the majority of the snow off, the read blade only having a few inches to move, scrapes it easily, without clogging up.
Using one blade or the other, this heavy wet snow pushed the little BX around, but with both blades on the ground, it gives me a much longer foot print, and really plants the tractor to the road.
Most of the time in early season, it’s cold and dry snow, and I only use the blower. These are similar to March warming conditions with snow overnight and rain during the day.
Unfortunately you must clear the slop, or it freezes in ridges and makes future snow removal harder, and terrible road conditions. The double blade system work well in these conditions.