if your blower is plugging up with wet snow, I know a lot of people will use silicone or cooking sprays in the chute and impeller housing.
I would suggest check your tolerance / clearance of your impeller and it's housing. For my Buhler /Farm King blowers the space between the impeller and its housing is very tight so no loss of blowing / clearing power. Never had a problem blowing wet snow or big piles with these blowers.
Today I worked on an almost new green blower that had close to 1/2 gap between the fan blades and the housing.... I felt performance was very poor and blower not moving the volume of snow it should.
So I cut up some conveyor belt I had laying around and bolted it to the impeller fan closing off the gap between the impeller fan and the housing to almost nothing.
Boy o' boy after first test this repaired blower probably blows twice as much snow & double the distance from before the gap was narrowed. Can probably now run the tractor at lower pto rpm's and still get the job done very well.
1 1/2 hours of labor and less than $10 worth of material doubled the blowers capacity and I am going to guess it will no longer have wet snow plugging issues again.
I have not had problems with my blowers with sticks or gravel with tight tolerances so felt closing the gap on the newer green blower brought to me would not be a problem either.
so if you are having trouble with wet snow plugging your impeller housing / chute check the tolerance between your impeller fan and its housing and see if there is a gap and see if there is a way to minimize it like I did. You might find your blower starts to blow well above its weight class with more snow being moved at faster speeds OR lower rpm's capable of doing same job.
I would suggest check your tolerance / clearance of your impeller and it's housing. For my Buhler /Farm King blowers the space between the impeller and its housing is very tight so no loss of blowing / clearing power. Never had a problem blowing wet snow or big piles with these blowers.
Today I worked on an almost new green blower that had close to 1/2 gap between the fan blades and the housing.... I felt performance was very poor and blower not moving the volume of snow it should.
So I cut up some conveyor belt I had laying around and bolted it to the impeller fan closing off the gap between the impeller fan and the housing to almost nothing.
Boy o' boy after first test this repaired blower probably blows twice as much snow & double the distance from before the gap was narrowed. Can probably now run the tractor at lower pto rpm's and still get the job done very well.
1 1/2 hours of labor and less than $10 worth of material doubled the blowers capacity and I am going to guess it will no longer have wet snow plugging issues again.
I have not had problems with my blowers with sticks or gravel with tight tolerances so felt closing the gap on the newer green blower brought to me would not be a problem either.
so if you are having trouble with wet snow plugging your impeller housing / chute check the tolerance between your impeller fan and its housing and see if there is a gap and see if there is a way to minimize it like I did. You might find your blower starts to blow well above its weight class with more snow being moved at faster speeds OR lower rpm's capable of doing same job.