Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts?

/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #1  

troverman

Gold Member
Joined
Jul 14, 2015
Messages
325
Location
NH
Tractor
Kubota MX6000 Cab
I have a Kubota MX6000 cab tractor. Normally I use a 7' rear blade for snow plowing. However, it is a pain to be looking behind you all the time. What do you guys think of making a wooden front plow?

Here's what I'm thinking:
1.) Buy a 1/4" SSQA metal plate
2.) Buy a 4x8' sheet of 5/8" flooring plywood ; cut it in half the long way for two sheets of 2' x 8'
3.) Using large thick washers and heavy duty bolts, bolt the doubled-up sheets of plywood to the SSQA plate. Next, screw a couple of 2x4x8 boards to the plywood "plow" just above and below the plate, for some additional rigidity.
4.) Use a couple of pieces of angle iron 8' long - one on the back and one on the top, bolted together through the wood at the bottom, as a cutting edge of sorts and to protect the wood.
5.) Paint everything for a bit of waterproofing effect

Obviously this "plow" might now last for more than a season or two, but the only thing needing to be replaced would be the wood. It seems like minimal effort to have a functioning front plow. A couple of wooden wings on the front would essentially create a snow pusher. The whole setup would be light enough to where the wood would just break before any loader arms got bent or anything like that, but still heavy enough to put the loader in "float" and scrape the snow.

I'm open to suggestions or criticisms and thoughts. Just an idea I had running through my head.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts?
  • Thread Starter
#3  
I have not seen any used snow blades with SSQA for cheap money at all.
I actually have a 9' Fisher hydraulic angle plow that I could weld a SSQA plate to, but I think that's a bit too heavy for my tractor and risking bending the arms, despite the plow having a trip edge. One sheet of 5/8 Advantech is $53 and the SSQA plate is about $120 shipped. The angle iron might run me $75 for the two pieces, plus a few bolts and washers. I don't think I could have a functioning plow for less than $250.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #4  
I don’t think you will be happy with it even for one season. I made a ballast box out of wood and it worked but always seemed on the edge of falling apart. I just live with the rear blade. A rear blade and end loader make a decent combination.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #5  
I have a Kubota MX6000 cab tractor. Normally I use a 7' rear blade for snow plowing. However, it is a pain to be looking behind you all the time. What do you guys think of making a wooden front plow?

Here's what I'm thinking:
1.) Buy a 1/4" SSQA metal plate
2.) Buy a 4x8' sheet of 5/8" flooring plywood ; cut it in half the long way for two sheets of 2' x 8'
3.) Using large thick washers and heavy duty bolts, bolt the doubled-up sheets of plywood to the SSQA plate. Next, screw a couple of 2x4x8 boards to the plywood "plow" just above and below the plate, for some additional rigidity.
4.) Use a couple of pieces of angle iron 8' long - one on the back and one on the top, bolted together through the wood at the bottom, as a cutting edge of sorts and to protect the wood.
5.) Paint everything for a bit of waterproofing effect

Obviously this "plow" might now last for more than a season or two, but the only thing needing to be replaced would be the wood. It seems like minimal effort to have a functioning front plow. A couple of wooden wings on the front would essentially create a snow pusher. The whole setup would be light enough to where the wood would just break before any loader arms got bent or anything like that, but still heavy enough to put the loader in "float" and scrape the snow.

I'm open to suggestions or criticisms and thoughts. Just an idea I had running through my head.

Early on, I built a home made plow from a 55 gallon barrel split in half and then welded in the center to double the width put a blade on the bottom and built a welded cage around the back side from angle and straight steel.
It lasted 2 plowings before the forces crushed it and I took it to the recycler. Something tells me wood would be even less tough but who knows. Ended up buying Meyers, Western plow and skid steer blade over the years.

ps. Plows without trip springs can end up in a disaster.
Something "Has" to give if you catch the plow blade on an immovable object
 
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/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts?
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Reason I ask is because a friend told me her dad did this using an interior door that he had from a remodel project. Somehow attached it to his bucket and supposedly works great. I don't have a door but figured I could "make" one pretty easily.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #7  
We have several junk auctions around here, that run every week. An old truck snow plow can be had for $100 maybe a few dollars more if it has a mount with it.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #8  
I think it will destroy itself in short order by scraping against the ground. For the same amount of work, try this. Adapt a 3 point quick hitch (think Harbor Freight) to your loader, reverse your rear blade and mount it on the front. (I assume your blade rotates 360 degrees.)

I think I have the best solution. I found a used 60 inch ATV blade for $100 and frame mounted it. Works like a charm.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts?
  • Thread Starter
#9  
I've got a 60" Polaris ATV snow blade which I don't use because the ATV is too light for the heavy snow we often get. A 60" blade on the front of my tractor would be silly and the rear wheels would be in unplowed snow.

I could consider the 3-point SSQA adapter, my rear blade does go all the way around.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #10  
Sounds better than this one...

aaaa.jpg
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #11  
I have a Kubota MX6000 cab tractor. Normally I use a 7' rear blade for snow plowing. However, it is a pain to be looking behind you all the time. What do you guys think of making a wooden front plow?

Here's what I'm thinking:
1.) Buy a 1/4" SSQA metal plate
2.) Buy a 4x8' sheet of 5/8" flooring plywood ; cut it in half the long way for two sheets of 2' x 8'
3.) Using large thick washers and heavy duty bolts, bolt the doubled-up sheets of plywood to the SSQA plate. Next, screw a couple of 2x4x8 boards to the plywood "plow" just above and below the plate, for some additional rigidity.
4.) Use a couple of pieces of angle iron 8' long - one on the back and one on the top, bolted together through the wood at the bottom, as a cutting edge of sorts and to protect the wood.
5.) Paint everything for a bit of waterproofing effect

Obviously this "plow" might now last for more than a season or two, but the only thing needing to be replaced would be the wood. It seems like minimal effort to have a functioning front plow. A couple of wooden wings on the front would essentially create a snow pusher. The whole setup would be light enough to where the wood would just break before any loader arms got bent or anything like that, but still heavy enough to put the loader in "float" and scrape the snow.

I'm open to suggestions or criticisms and thoughts. Just an idea I had running through my head.
I'd find a used truck snowplow for a few hundred bucks and mount that to your SSQA. Maybe even hook up the hydraulics.

I have a 60" power angle snow blade on my FEL arms on my little PowerTrac PT425. Works great!
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #12  
I have an old floor timber from my cabin/work shed. I gripped it with my grapple and tried to use it. Sure glad I paid nothing for it. It did not work well at all.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #13  
What I do with my MX6000 works great and it’s a cheap option. I installed some edge tamers to my loader bucket and then turn my rear blade 180 degrees so it won’t pick up the road gravel. With the bucket pushing the bulk of the snow and my 8’ rear blade angled to clean the road it works great.

 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #14  
Is this home made wood plow also not going to be a floating design?
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #15  
Frozen snowbank could be hard wooden plow.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #16  
1965 I was 9 years old, Dad bought me a 1950 Farmall Cub. Wasn't a big tractor, but better than the crappy little snow blower. I soon was clearing six driveways in VT. It was a big job with the anemic blower.
Plow had two push rods made of Hardhack (Hop Hornbeam). They bolted at front to 3" x 1/4" Angle iron. Three fir planks made up the blade. It was held centered by a L shaped square tube item that fastened in the tractor's implement mounts behind the front axle. This passed through a square hole in a 2 x 12 crossmember bolted through the push rods. Lifting was with chains to the tractors hydraulic rocker arms.

It was an improvement over the snow blower, though slow, it was less a problem when I was that young.

At 16 I had a Jeep & bought an old plow to fit to it. Ability to angle the blade speeded up the process of plowing. Used that 12 years until the frame rusted away. Then it was an 8' Fisher on a Jeep full sized Cherokee. 360 V8, four speed & locker in rear, with tire chains, it was a real plow rig!
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #17  
Frozen snowbank could be hard wooden plow.
Mine on a 1950 Farmall Cub would occasionally break the bottom plank. Neighbor made me shoes of 14 gauge flat stock to weld up & bolt on helped a lot. Eventually replaced the bottom plank with American Elm. Never broke a plank again!
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #18  
A wooden snowplow? Maybe trade-in one of those bad ass powerstrokes and buy yourself a real snowplow.

:ROFLMAO:
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts?
  • Thread Starter
#19  
A wooden snowplow? Maybe trade-in one of those bad ass powerstrokes and buy yourself a real snowplow.

:ROFLMAO:

The old F-550 has a v-plow and I also have a newer GMC3500 gas dump with a plow as well. I do my driveway and a couple neighboring driveways which are right. The tractor is more maneuverable than the plow trucks in tight quarters and can stack higher. Plus I keep the plow trucks at my shop which is a couple miles away.
 
/ Homemade wooden snowplow - thoughts? #20  
We operate a 6ft plow on our Outlander atv (6x6) and love it. Myself, I'd not waste my time on wood plows.
 
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