snowman
Gold Member
Seems like alot of people use the FEL for snow removal, or have it rigged up to run an actual plow off the FEL or FEL arms.
I've been thinking about this and, in general, the basic concept of doing whatever it takes to get the job done.
Seems to me that someone with just a FEL that really wants a blade up front, but doesn't want to spend the money or doesn't have the ability to weld could make a relatively good plow using using a wooden board.
If my FEL was 5' wide, get a piece of 8' by 2" by 10" (or 12") - cut it down to 6' wide, and then chain it to the FEL on either side (screw eyebolts on the tractor side of the board to latch the chains onto). Would have to add some type of clamps to keep the board fro shifting side to side or up and down - could just drill bolts from the "face" of the blade so that they slip in over the FEL edges.
Could "angle" the board by sticking a 2' or so piece of wood inside one side of the bucket - that would keep the "blade" from being flush with the FEL. Stick it on the right side of the bucket and the snow would be pushed off to the left side.
Could even rig up wings to make it scoop.
Weight isn't an issue because you could add a little down angle pressure (not too much of couse) with the FEL.
The wood board would definitely wear down - how fast depends on how rough the surface is (gravel vs asphalt). can just flip the board over after one side wears down.
Even if you had replace the board each year, only cost is about $20.
Kind of a "poor man's plow", but should work for pushing snow.
Would also be a "quick detach" - easy to take off and not heavy, so you can pull it off and use the FEL for normal stacking and moving.
I've been thinking about this and, in general, the basic concept of doing whatever it takes to get the job done.
Seems to me that someone with just a FEL that really wants a blade up front, but doesn't want to spend the money or doesn't have the ability to weld could make a relatively good plow using using a wooden board.
If my FEL was 5' wide, get a piece of 8' by 2" by 10" (or 12") - cut it down to 6' wide, and then chain it to the FEL on either side (screw eyebolts on the tractor side of the board to latch the chains onto). Would have to add some type of clamps to keep the board fro shifting side to side or up and down - could just drill bolts from the "face" of the blade so that they slip in over the FEL edges.
Could "angle" the board by sticking a 2' or so piece of wood inside one side of the bucket - that would keep the "blade" from being flush with the FEL. Stick it on the right side of the bucket and the snow would be pushed off to the left side.
Could even rig up wings to make it scoop.
Weight isn't an issue because you could add a little down angle pressure (not too much of couse) with the FEL.
The wood board would definitely wear down - how fast depends on how rough the surface is (gravel vs asphalt). can just flip the board over after one side wears down.
Even if you had replace the board each year, only cost is about $20.
Kind of a "poor man's plow", but should work for pushing snow.
Would also be a "quick detach" - easy to take off and not heavy, so you can pull it off and use the FEL for normal stacking and moving.