rear 3pt blower

   / rear 3pt blower #41  
94BULLITT said:
Who makes a $3k pull type?

For a conventional rear 3 point (drive forwards) for our 1635, Lucknow, MK Martin, are just shy of that. Those are all made here in Ontario a couple of hours from me. Provonost will be the same price. Our current blower was just under $2,500, thats a 50" Farm King.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #42  
Winter Deere;
Stick with your loader. Next you will be trying to figure out cost of diesel fuel per snow fall. I was frugal like you once... then I realized I didn't have a two hundred year warranty. Now I look at and buy quality. Both my tractorsd have less than three hundred hours and I guarantee they will never reach a thousand... at least on my yard. I am a serious buyer that likes newer toys. You look at the antique style back up snowblowers while I drive forward like it is supposed to be. Maybe you should look at a bidirectional machine... oh wait a minute, your budget wouldn't allow it.
You can thank JD for quality products because buyers like you always need to keep the old style machines running. If I had one I would donate it to a museum.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #43  
Winter Deere;
Stick with your loader. Next you will be trying to figure out cost of diesel fuel per snow fall. I was frugal like you once... then I realized I didn't have a two hundred year warranty. Now I look at and buy quality. Both my tractorsd have less than three hundred hours and I guarantee they will never reach a thousand... at least on my yard. I am a serious buyer that likes newer toys. You look at the antique style back up snowblowers while I drive forward like it is supposed to be. Maybe you should look at a bidirectional machine... oh wait a minute, your budget wouldn't allow it.
You can thank JD for quality products because buyers like you always need to keep the old style machines running. If I had one I would donate it to a museum.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #44  
Winter Deere;
Stick with your loader. Next you will be trying to figure out cost of diesel fuel per snow fall. I was frugal like you once... then I realized I didn't have a two hundred year warranty. Now I look at and buy quality. Both my tractorsd have less than three hundred hours and I guarantee they will never reach a thousand... at least on my yard. I am a serious buyer that likes newer toys. You look at the antique style back up snowblowers while I drive forward like it is supposed to be. Maybe you should look at a bidirectional machine... oh wait a minute, your budget wouldn't allow it.
You can thank JD for quality products because buyers like you always need to keep the old style machines running. If I had one I would donate it to a museum.

I'm not sure if that was anything but a chance for you to brag about what you own, as it did not contain any useful information otherwise.

I spent $2700 on a brand new Woods SB72S snowblower, which I'm sure I'll use more than once per year (because I have it), but we typically only get one storm per year where it's really necessary. I don't see buying any new snowblower for a once-per-year need as being frugal, but I suppose we all have our own biases. As to the tractor, it's used for hauling firewood around, and now pushing the snowblower, not much more. My total investment is around $12k with the blower... again not my definition of frugal for a pencil pusher who uses the thing only a few hours each weekend for house chores.

I don't see the need to foolishly spend unnecessary money, just so I can brag about what I bought on an anonymous tractor forum, but we each have our own wants and motives. I won't attack you for yours, as irrational as they are, if you don't attack me for mine.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #45  
What is " irrational " about good equipment ? My opinion is related to modern useful scientifically tested well engineered tools used to make life a pleasure. I don't take anything personal because everyone has a choice and opinion. No one has to reinvent the wheel. The only time I want to look backwards is changing lanes in traffic and reviewing past mistakes. Each day opens a new experience and this is what I look FORWARD to.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #46  
check my 2006 jeep tj no pride in the workmanship disgaceful
 
   / rear 3pt blower #47  
I own a 68" meteor pull type blower and have had it for 6 years. I live on a 1 mile private road and do 7 of my neighbors driveways and never look back. this blower with hydrolic chute rotation with a heated cab is perfect for the amount of work I do. havent had any major repairs. it is on the rear of an l2800.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #48  
I own a 68" meteor pull type blower and have had it for 6 years. I live on a 1 mile private road and do 7 of my neighbors driveways and never look back. this blower with hydrolic chute rotation with a heated cab is perfect for the amount of work I do. havent had any major repairs. it is on the rear of an l2800.

Excellent choice!! Those blowers are popular, and contrary to myth, getting stuck is harder than most think.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #49  
You may wwant a look at the Lorenz snow blowers. really nice if gravel or icey conditions are an issue. Priced well for what you get.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #50  
You may wwant a look at the Lorenz snow blowers. really nice if gravel or icey conditions are an issue. Priced well for what you get.

I hope to get a blower next year and the Lorenz caught my eye. What makes it nice for gravel or ice? I noticed that it has an unusual auger. Is it effective for powdery snow?

Bob
 
   / rear 3pt blower #51  
Here is my 5ft Lorenz I bought used. The snow was drifted in pretty solid.
 

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   / rear 3pt blower #52  
This is my 72"Lorenz in a heavy snow.
 

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   / rear 3pt blower #54  
What was the PTO hp that was driving the 72" Lorenz snow blower?

I assume he was using it on his TC25, around 20hp PTO. Lorenz blowers are somewhat unusual in that they were specifically developed for use on farm tractors but have become popular with small to mid-size CUT owners owing to their relatively modest PTO HP requirements and less bulky design than industrial blowers of similar capacity. Instead of a single very heavy auger Lorenz uses a stack of two much lighter shafts studded with a very unusual set of "fins" instead of a continuous screw, some models have "paddles" in the middle section. It is nonetheless a 2-stage design. The fins limit the amount of snow that can be ingested at once, which is a clever way to limit capacity to what a smaller engine can safely handle without reducing the overall dimensions. It is much lighter than an industrial blower which allows small CUTs to be fitted with a larger blower than would otherwise be possible. The downside is that the design can be overstressed when used on large CUT's and standard size utility tractors.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #55  
Karl, I assume you have never worked on a Lorenz blower as the shafts with the paddles are anything but light duty. I bought my Lorenz used, drained and replaced the gear case oil, then replaced the 4 auger bearings. The auger shafts are WAY HEAVY. They are designed to be able to chew through a pile of snow that has sat for a while and froze solid. Yes, I have done this, it works, with out any bending or shearing pins. The picture of me going through 3 feet of very dense drifted snow doesn't show that the snow is being thown over the garage. I looked at many different makes of blowers before buying the Lorenz and I sure wouldn't say it is light duty. The guy that sold it to me was buying another Lorenz for the front of his huge skid steer.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #56  
Also, the only time I sheared a pin was when the neighbor had concrete block, a big one, where they wanted me to blow. Was I scared I was going to hurt those auger shafts? NO! Another thing karl, the impeller design makes a huge difference in blower volume. One brand only has 2 inch deep impeller blades and hardly blows any air out the chute. That's how that brand limits consumed power.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #57  
Thanks, Karl2 for the information. My Bobcat Ct335 has 26.5 rear pto hp and I'm interested
in the Lorenz design and construction. It looks like the 72" Lorenz should work fine with my
tractor. Now, to find one somewhere in my area.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #59  
Karl, I assume you have never worked on a Lorenz blower as the shafts with the paddles are anything but light duty.

Sorry if I wasn't clear but I was referring to the Lorenz 30 series and its descendants, which is what you guys use. I also wrote light-weight, not light-duty. Light-weight being of course a relative term. It simply means the combined weight of both augers is less than that of a single screw found in an industrial blower of similar volume, which typically requires 50hp PTO due to the resistance such a mass exerts on the engine. Lighter weight allows the Lorenz to be used on smaller tractors. The whole blower weighs about half as much as that of its industrial counterpart, but is limited to 40 HP PTO max, above that the risk of damaging parts increases. There are larger Lorenz blowers meant for bigger machinery but they are built with the same objective of providing a "lighter" alternative to operators who would otherwise have to use a much less fuel-efficient industrial blower when they don't really need one. I hope this makes more sense. The info I obtained from a Lorenz rep at a trade show last Fall.
 
   / rear 3pt blower #60  
Thanks, Karl2 for the information. My Bobcat Ct335 has 26.5 rear pto hp and I'm interested
in the Lorenz design and construction. It looks like the 72" Lorenz should work fine with my
tractor. Now, to find one somewhere in my area.

Harrisville and Millbury appear the be dealerships closest to you. Some driving involved I reckon.
 

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