These all look great!
My only question -
Why do you need to adjust the deflector often? Tight quarters? Something else?
Trust me, not being a smart a$$. Just trying to understand it.
Honestly, I've been considering a similar project just because it's kinda cool to do...that's good enough reason in my book too!
Thanks!
RCW - good question, asked honestly, so I'll try to answer it honestly here, from my experience. Of course others will have their own experiences which are pretty much guaranteed to differ from mine!
When I blow snow at the airport I'm working between two hangars which sit about 45 degrees to the prevailing wind. The resulting turbulent airflow around the hangars is absolutely wild. At one end of the row hangar (it's 240 feet long) I have the wind fully behind the discharged snow. If I keep the chute up high I'll end up covering all the parked airplanes with snow. Under these conditions I deflect the chute down pretty much as low as it will go to limit the throw distance.
At the other end of the row hangar the wind is curling around the corner of the hangar, almost pushing the blown snow right back into the blower. I adjust the chute for maximum distance of throw to get it moved out of the wind.
Here at home it again is a combination of effects that come into play. Wind is the more critical factor, while the moisture content of the snow itself is likely the next biggest factor. If the snow is wet, one wants to keep that stream of heavy, destructive stuff aimed down as low as one can get to keep from shooting it into things you don't want to destroy (I've knocked a mailbox right off the post with it... Ooops!). If it's super wet slush, the chute has to be pointed up, otherwise the slop will drop right beside the blower.
Like you, I wasn't sure I would use the chute deflector very often. In honesty, on the home tractor there are times when it doesn't get adjusted at all during an entire snow blowing session. That's when we have light winds, good consistent snow, and nothing parked in the way. Other times I'll be almost constantly changing the discharge angle up and down to deal with varying winds, varying snow conditions, and obstacles I don't want to 'snow blast".
With respect to rotation of the chute, I'm with some of the others who have posted here saying they can blow snow into a pile by cranking the chute to match tractor speed. I definitely can't do that with the hydraulic motor rotating the chute. The 12V winch-powered chute can put the snow into a pile but it's not as easy as with the hand crank. The hydraulic wins hands-down when I'm making multiple passes up and down and sending the snow always in the same direction - being able to quickly rotate the chute 180 degrees at the end of a pass is a real advantage.