I would agree that 25 horsepower seems marginal at best for a 72 inch blower. HST will mitigate that a bit as it helps control groundspeed, but a bit more ummmph from a bigger engine would make a better overall combination.This woodmax wants 25 HP min.
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WoodMaxx offers 48",60",72",84" PTO drive snow blower attachments for tractors staring at ($2,149.00) w/ Free shipping and factory direct. Standard, 12v electric, and hydraulic chute rotator options available. Call 855-966-3629 or visit woodmaxx.comwoodmaxx.com
Nice thing about a hydrostatic drive tractor is how easily the over the ground speed is modulated to suit the blower loading.
I might call 35hp a better match depending on snow type. Do you get wind drifted fill? That stuff can be hard and dense.
also, in a cabbed tractor (where you want to be if blowing snow) your heater is gonna take some horses away too. IMO putting a 72 inch blower on anything under 40-50hp is setting up for failure if you get any sort of snow over a few inches. Maybe I'm wrong, but I've learned you need the power to do what you want, and "just barely" having enough is not actually enough.I would agree that 25 horsepower seems marginal at best for a 72 inch blower. HST will mitigate that a bit as it helps control groundspeed, but a bit more ummmph from a bigger engine would make a better overall combination.
The topic of throw distance is a good one.also, in a cabbed tractor (where you want to be if blowing snow) your heater is gonna take some horses away too. IMO putting a 72 inch blower on anything under 40-50hp is setting up for failure if you get any sort of snow over a few inches. Maybe I'm wrong, but I've learned you need the power to do what you want, and "just barely" having enough is not actually enough.
The rule of thumb for a cutter is 5hp per foot. I don't think your blower is using any less power than a cutter is. It's most likely using more. So maybe you can squeak by with a 30hp. But as I've said, I have a 64 inch one with 30hp and I wish I had more power every storm over 4-5 inches.---That said, I am doing a parking lot and long, wide driveways where I need to throw it far. If OP just needs it to go two feet off to the side, maybe it could work with lower power just fine.
sounds like you're gonna do it, so do it. Let us know how it goes and any thoughts you have after a few storms.Thanks. Regarding throw distance, I may be over simplifying but surely that just depends on PTO speed. From my understanding in conditions where my tractor can maintain full RPM, then more power wouldn't improve anything, at that moment.
From several seasons experience I find I hit a number of different limits, with different solutions.
(1) Most common, too much snow for the blower to clear even though it's spinning full speed. Solution, slow down.
(2) Too deep for one pass. Raise blower, run into drift, then pull back out and go in with blower lowered.
(3) Engine labouring. Doesn't happen that often, but the best solution would be more power rather than slowing down.
The other annoyance is where the depth and type of snow means I could run faster, but I don't have another usable gear so still have to plod along slower than necessary.
Thanks. Regarding throw distance, I may be over simplifying but surely that just depends on PTO speed. From my understanding in conditions where my tractor can maintain full RPM, then more power wouldn't improve anything, at that moment.
From several seasons experience I find I hit a number of different limits, with different solutions.
(1) Most common, too much snow for the blower to clear even though it's spinning full speed. Solution, slow down.
(2) Too deep for one pass. Raise blower, run into drift, then pull back out and go in with blower lowered.
(3) Engine labouring. Doesn't happen that often, but the best solution would be more power rather than slowing down.
The other annoyance is where the depth and type of snow means I could run faster, but I don't have another usable gear so still have to plod along slower than necessary.
This is the truth right here. You can skimp all you want, but you'll die on your tractor with only half your driveway cleared.To me, the bottom line, assuming time matters when clearing snow, is that 40 PTO HP would be an absolute minimum, and 50 hp would be much better. I have run a 74" blower with 50 hp PTO and it worked well 80% of the time. 20% of the time I really had to slow down, take partial swaths, etc.. I tried running an 84" blower on the same tractor and it was quite unsatisfactory. 80% of the time I was moving at 1 to 1.5 mph, and still struggling to keep the RPM up so the snow would throw far enough. Now I have that 84" blower on a 100 hp PTO and it works much better with the hydraulic relief acting before RPMs even think about dropping.
I ran a 64" blower for several years on a 23 hp Deere 855 with 19 hp at the PTO. It did fine in clean powdery snow up to 2 feet deep, but trying to push the thing thru the hard pack of salted ice that the township would always leave at the end of my driveway when then'd plow the road often had me having to lift the blower and take two or more passes in any storm averaging much more than maybe 10 inches. Likewise with heavy wet snow much over a foot deep, you could easily bog the machine if you didn't crawl real slow.I would not recommend a 72" blower and 19hp at the pto. Sure, you could slow way down with an HST, and take smaller bites, but it's going to aggravatingly slow going in all but the lightest snow conditions.
I don’t believe a fan for heater is going make any difference in a tractor’s ability to run a snow blower or any other attachment.also, in a cabbed tractor (where you want to be if blowing snow) your heater is gonna take some horses away too.
Thanks everyone. In terms of brand, nearest dealer does Kubota, then we have a Kioti dealer with depots throughout Scotland. Really I'm hoping for something used, ideally Kubota, JD, or other big brand.Not sure which oems you have available. There are quite a few with 35-40 HP. TYM has a T394, a 3515 and a 4215 in those size ranges (PTO HP from 30-36). LS has even more in that size range (they also make CaseIH and NH models in that size).
Geared will get more power to the ground due gear efficiency. HST is slightly less efficient. But I find the infinitely variable speeds & ease of control completely worth it. Having run geared & HST CUTS as well as bigger geared tractors, I think HST is the way to go for flexible CUT tasks. In a field machine, efficiency wins out over flexibility thoughBy the way in hindsight I should have asked "how much power is needed for HST vs geared?"
But I got my answer anyway, nobody's said I could get away with less than I have already.