A couple of comments:
Junkman: I share about 1/3 of my driveway, which I own, with a neighbor. We granted him an easement after they bought the property for nothing; just being neighborly. It is not paved. My neighbor wanted it paved when we granted him the easement, but we didn't, so we refused. He paved his right up to the property line.
If we were every to come home from vacation and find it paved, there would be **** to pay.
As to the issue of breaking shear pins: I think it's pretty obvious that the gravel you stir up with the blade is getting stuck in the auger and causing the shear pins to break. I've got a
B2650--the previous generation to the one you've got--and it has ONLY ever blown a shear pin when something got wedged in it: a small, errant piece of firewood. I had to hammer it out, since the auger had cut into the side.
My driveway has a foundation of stone, a mix of dirt and gravel, topped by a finish layer of dirt. We get a little bit of erosion when things melt, but it's no problem to pick up the larger stones in the late fall/early winter before the first snow. Once the ground is frozen (and there's half an inch or so of compacted snow base) there's no problem at all with stones/rocks. If I see one laying around, I pick it up.
My advice: next summer, use that blade to put all that gravel intlo a pile and move it off your driveway. Then you'll be able to blow your snow just fine.
Jim