I have a rear mounted blade but had this old blade laying around so we thought we would try one on the front.I hope it works out but if not maybe we will try to modify it.I will let you guys know how it works in its present form.I just want to use it till I get a base,then the blower goes on anyway.I built a loader-mounted front snow plow - not as fancy as yours, and not rotatable. The problem you will run into is that the pushing force lines up to the top of the loader mount, by the steering wheel. When you push, the tractor picks up the front wheels, so you lose both traction and steering. As long as the front blade is square you can push ahead with the rear tires, but if you try to steer or angle the blade, you are out of luck. A rear blade works much better. Or bulldozer mount, that isn't trying to pick up the front end.
Years ago I spent a week making a rotating front blade mount, used it one time in heavy snow, and gave up. I hope you have better luck.
Not ever having plowed snow, just wondering why "float" on the loader won't help.I built a loader-mounted front snow plow - not as fancy as yours, and not rotatable. The problem you will run into is that the pushing force lines up to the top of the loader mount, by the steering wheel. When you push, the tractor picks up the front wheels, so you lose both traction and steering. As long as the front blade is square you can push ahead with the rear tires, but if you try to steer or angle the blade, you are out of luck. A rear blade works much better. Or bulldozer mount, that isn't trying to pick up the front end.
Years ago I spent a week making a rotating front blade mount, used it one time in heavy snow, and gave up. I hope you have better luck.
As long as the blade is square, float works OK, pretty well. When the front end picks up, however, the blade is angling down, and the cutting edge is digging in more aggressively. To get any control, you have to pick up the blade a bit.Not ever having plowed snow, just wondering why "float" on the loader won't help.
I also plan on putting a set of these on.....I think they will help a lot for the blade digging in.Have you considered adding a set of shoes like they use on the snow plows for trucks? You Could adjust the blade so it's just off the ground so it doesn't dig in, but at the same time it moves the majority of the snow
Will do,thanks Shaun !!Just put the loader into float. It won't lift anything. You can also put some adjustable 'shoes' on the sides of the blade when using it as a snow plow, this will keep the blade from trying to bite into the surfaces, especially if on gravel roads. Take the shoes off when using it as a true cutting blade.
Nice work!
I'm retired so I have all day to do 3 driveways.....nice and slow.....Thanks for the compliment but gotta give my buddy most of the credit.....awesome welder and fabricator......Great looking blade. Without any trip edge, you will want to keep your speed down, or else you could be eating the steering wheel.