I think I know the answer....but was to cheap at the time to opt for this feature on my QUICKATTACH 6' snowblade/light material blade. A long time mover of snow with a Kubota, here at over 5,000' in Idaho, my old 2105 was a fair bit smaller then the new L3301, but it did a great job over the years. When I sold it I kept the 5' PTO rear blower, it's on the new rig. I also had a 5' ProTech snow pusher, with a rubber bottom scraper, for the old 'bota. The type you can just drive up and using the existing FEL pick it up and get to work. Can't drag with it, only push of course. I still have it, and will sell it locally no doubt at some point.
So, blower on rear, blade on front, FEL bucket readily available also. I just plowed with it for the first time, and have pretty much decided I screwed up by not getting the hydraulic angle option. When the blade is straight, you of course get a fair amount of spill over on both ends, at least as opposed to my old snow pusher which had end plates. When angled, it works great, as long as you want a big berm on whatever side you angle to. At first I thought I could plan my snow work without frequent angle changes, just work with the angle I had manually set, that quickly got irritating and impractical! Anyone else go through this? If so, when you got the hydraulic angle setup, it was a big game changer I'm guessing? Did you kick yourself for not getting one to start with?! Besides having to get off and manually change the angle, you only have the option of going from straight to a 45, I found my self wanting to go in , between the two extremeness, which the hyd. would allow, not all or nothing. I don't want to use the FEL bucket for plowing, I am liking the curled and sprung snow blade, I like the protection the springs offer on my gravel/rock driveway, late in the season, I'll use it to move big berms, that build up to high to blow over, but the blade will be my main tool for 75% of the storms we get, the other 25% will be blown, we get a lot of wind and drift up here.
So, blower on rear, blade on front, FEL bucket readily available also. I just plowed with it for the first time, and have pretty much decided I screwed up by not getting the hydraulic angle option. When the blade is straight, you of course get a fair amount of spill over on both ends, at least as opposed to my old snow pusher which had end plates. When angled, it works great, as long as you want a big berm on whatever side you angle to. At first I thought I could plan my snow work without frequent angle changes, just work with the angle I had manually set, that quickly got irritating and impractical! Anyone else go through this? If so, when you got the hydraulic angle setup, it was a big game changer I'm guessing? Did you kick yourself for not getting one to start with?! Besides having to get off and manually change the angle, you only have the option of going from straight to a 45, I found my self wanting to go in , between the two extremeness, which the hyd. would allow, not all or nothing. I don't want to use the FEL bucket for plowing, I am liking the curled and sprung snow blade, I like the protection the springs offer on my gravel/rock driveway, late in the season, I'll use it to move big berms, that build up to high to blow over, but the blade will be my main tool for 75% of the storms we get, the other 25% will be blown, we get a lot of wind and drift up here.