Hi! Does anyone know if the B2250 snow blower will fit the B7200 HST without modification? Thanks!
This is a B2551 on my B7200HST. Planning on repainting it this summer.You sure you have the right letter and number combination for the snowblower?
I can't find one, anywhere?
The B7200HSTD used a B2551 snowblower, and even then there were alot of options to parts,frames and drives for that blower, so not all of them would be a direct hook up without other parts.
hi, I have acquired a B2551 blower with a B7200D tractor.Yes as he said the B2551 comes in many variations so make sure its correct. If its a rear mount and runs off the rear PTO it will be universal.
There were two different front mount kits that came with the B2551 that I know about, and parts to go back and forth between them to fit your tractor are very expensive (if you can find them).
thanks for this, very helpful. I’m prettyI just finished mounting my B2550 blower to my B7200HST. This blower came with the tractor when I purchased it a few years back. Mine did not have a PTO clutch, only a shaft about 30" long with a universal at both ends mounted to the mid PTO with a second telescopic shaft mounted up front to the blower. The PTO operates on the high range with the engine operating at maximum about 2400 rpm. I can tell you that it is very important with the front loaded blower that everything is good and secure and everything is well maintained,. I had to completely dismantle the chain reduction on the blower, replace the bearings, clean and lube the chain. I found out the hard way that the front shaft operates exactly the same as a rear PTO shaft. The outer shell of the shaft which is steel must also float freely from the inner square shaft. Mine was siezed and turned with the shaft. It was telescopic but would not turn freely. Inside is a nylon bushing that was seized on mine. Im sure the parts breakdown wont show you this. So i think it is wise to examine and clean every part especially if it has been sitting a long time. VIBRATION is key to look out for. One other note when mounting the blower to the frame, there are two pins, one one each side. These pins go into one of three holes on the frame. Because of clearance reasons, I had to use the top hole. Look for clearance between the front shaft and the base bolts that hold the frame together. This is important when you lift the blower up and down. On mine, the shaft is mounted directly over one of the bolts which was installed with the nut on top. I reversed it to obtain more clearance. Now with no vibration and good clearance, it is working pretty good. Hope this helps
Hi there, do you still have your rear mounted b2551 blower??This is a B2551 on my B7200HST. Planning on repainting it this summer.
Hi, could you do me a favour and measure the length of your PTO shaft to your blower and measure the length of the mounting arms on the blower. Gonna need to adapt mine and hoping to make a PTO shaft that I already have work.This is a B2551 on my B7200HST. Planning on repainting it this summer.
Sorry I took so long to reply.Hi, could you do me a favour and measure the length of your PTO shaft to your blower and measure the length of the mounting arms on the blower. Gonna need to adapt mine and hoping to make a PTO shaft that I already have work.
worried it’s going to put the blower super close to the rear of the tractor (not even sure that will be an issue yet).
The PTO shaft I have is only 29” long so my mounting arms will have to be only like 8” long. Can you see that being an issue?
cheers
WOW! That’s a lot of money for a small driveshaft. A machine shop might be able to modify one cheaper.That’s super helpful. I ended up sourcing a frame from someone’s old broken log splitter which so I made some mounting arms to fit. Was a couple of inches wider than I needed so I made wider arms to match. Just need to source a PTO shaft now that will work. The Kubota dealer nearest to me is stating C$630 for the original spec PTO shaft. Surely I can source one way cheaper than that!!??
I was hoping to use the PTO shaft from the log splitter too as it seemed to have the correct ends but something is not working on the tractor end. .
Thanks very much for the photos, very helpful.
That’s what I thought. Randomly the PTO shaft that I have has the exact same keyed yoke for the blower, it’s just got a weird end for the tractor. I think it may have been incorrectly secured and used and become a bit mangled as a result. The splines start off really narrow and then half way down (just after the locking balls) the splines seems to become normal width but I can’t get it to slip down the whole way. I think a small lip has developed which is stopping it. Reluctant to try and file it down to make it fit as I will only have 1/2 the contact as the splines are too narrow. Very odd!Any standard issue 1 3/8'' 6-spline driveshaft around the correct length should work. The hard part is figuring out what the kubota snowblower drive unit uses. It's hard to tell from your pic, but it appears to be a smooth bore with keyway and through bolt. That's exactly how my Meteor is setup. So maybe that's common to snowblowers?
Yeah that does sound odd. Maybe it wasn't greased and wore funny. You should be able to replace just the tractor end from the u-joint on. I'd check for a casting number. You can also mic the joint dimensions and that will tell you what type of driveshaft you have.That’s what I thought. Randomly the PTO shaft that I have has the exact same keyed yoke for the blower, it’s just got a weird end for the tractor. I think it may have been incorrectly secured and used and become a bit mangled as a result. The splines start off really narrow and then half way down (just after the locking balls) the splines seems to become normal width but I can’t get it to slip down the whole way. I think a small lip has developed which is stopping it. Reluctant to try and file it down to make it fit as I will only have 1/2 the contact as the splines are too narrow. Very odd!