snowblower and rocks

   / snowblower and rocks #1  

chuck172

Platinum Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2006
Messages
844
Location
N.E, Pa.
Tractor
Kioti DK40SEH, Ford 4500TLB, Ford 8n
I have never owned, or even operated a snowblower. I have a 800' shale/gravel unpaved driveway that needs snow-removal. I've been plowing with an old f250 thats rotting away. How would a rear pto snowblower work in my situation?
What happens if I suck up an occasional rock into the chute?
 
   / snowblower and rocks #2  
Buy shear pins...lots and lots of shear pins...I don't know what the clearances are for a 3 point model, but on the many occasions I have picked them up with my walk behind, I'm always out there with a punch and a hammer, knocking out what's left of the pin and putting a new one in. I've come to accept it as a fact of life. I try to avoid using mine in the main drive, instead just using it close to the buildings, preferring my loader bucket for the big stuff.

Sent from my LGL35G using TractorByNet
 
   / snowblower and rocks #3  
My 500 foot driveway was gravel for 10 years and never had any stones/ rocks jam the blower up. It put many in the woods but didn't jam.
On the first snow fall if it is only a couple inches drive over it and pack it down. You need the hard snow base to keep the blower from digging in to the driveway. If it a big first snow then keep the blower up a inch so you can make the hard snow bottom.
Once you have the base then your rock issue will stay on the driveway.

Al
 
   / snowblower and rocks #4  
Its all in how well the driveway is done and in some cases how well you prep it for the winter. I take my grader blade to the drive and prep it for the winter. This ensures that its as smooth as possible and then adjust the snow blower so that it dosnt scrape too close for the first snow. Not quite an inch like others but probably about 1/2 inch.
The key is in testing the blower to see where it will pick up rock/gravel before winter sets in and prepping the areas that need attention or adjusting the blower slightly. I tested my new blower yesterday. Probably looked like a fool pushing a snow blower around with no snow but I needed to see where it would try to gouge the driveway and pick things up so I can level them off before hand.
Anyway I haven't blown a shear pin as of yet due to rocks or anything else for that matter. And with a little bit of prep before the cold starts I hope to continue that trend again this year.
 
   / snowblower and rocks #5  
You will be disappointed with a rear blower after you use it a few times. Possibly not in IT'S performance, but YOURS. That's alot of driving in reverse, a lot of snow blowing on you when the wind is blowing and to boot you are sitting in the cold. Put a new clutch in my rusty old truck because driving forward and having heat was worth it. Still UST the blower for a few things, but truck is primary means.
 
   / snowblower and rocks #6  
I have used a rear blower on 700Ft. gravel drive plus parking areas for the past 25 years with no problems other than some snow in the face if going against the wind . Like mentioned above just get a good snow frozen base first. In my area the ground freezes and stays frozen usually so that helps me out , if it kept thawing out all the time it could be a different story. I really like a blower as it gets the snow out of the way ready for the next storm . At 72 I bought a cab tractor with a front blower for next year as the the turning and looking backwards was getting to hard for me and you have the advantage of being out there no matter what the weather .
 
   / snowblower and rocks #7  
I have a mile long gravel driveway. I used a rear blower - pto driven - for 25 years. Now that I have a larger tractor I sold the snow blower and use only the rear blade. I preped the driveway by first using the rear blade. It would remove MOST of the larger rocks. I only used the rear blower when the driveway had frozen hard. I always figured the first time I used the snow blower I would pop 2-3 shear bolts on larger rocks that were kicked up in front of the blower.

I had a open station tractor and looking over my shoulder for the three hours it took to do the driveway, yard & mail box would put a krink in my neck that lasted a couple days. My new tractor is still open station but going forward makes all the difference. I'm able to plow the driveway and still bust the berms that build up as the winter wears on. We don't get really deep snows that often and, at least in my case, little to no drifting. Besides, I'm retired, and there is no need to be in any hurry to get anywhere.

You have no idea how many weird & unusual positions you can assume when driving backwards blowing snow for three hours!! Driving forward using the rear blade is such a pleasure now.
 
   / snowblower and rocks #8  
Being disappointed because of having to face backward for my first winter with a rear mount wasn't an option!
I WAS DELIGHTED That I didn't have to spend hours upon hours out in the cold moving those snow banks back further and further with each snow and the time to clear the drive on a per snow basis without taking the banks into consideration was more than cut in half. I was also able to make short work of the big drifts that before would eat lots of time slowly digging threw them with the loader.
Last but not least I can remember having to call and get a second plow truck out here to help push the F-250 threw the snow as it wasn't able to open up even the beginning of the driveway but the snow blower was able to open it up everytime no matter how bad the drifts were or even if I could get to blowing it right away or a day or two later.
Yes I can see some folks having a problem with looking over their shoulder to plow but consider a set of mirrors and some good bright rear lights and you can minimize that time greatly. I still use the loader during the winter and with a front mount would loose that option.
 
   / snowblower and rocks #9  
Over 10 yrs of blowing a gravel based drive.
As said, pack down the 1st 2-3 inches to create a base and the going is fine for the rest of the winter.
I am cabbed and this winter I spoiled myself by adding a back up camera system**, no more sitting 'side saddle' for me. (my home made cab is heated)

I built my self over-sized skids or shoes* for my blower for the first snows in order to create that 1" or so compacted base. Once I have my base made I remove the shoes and blow whatever comes down for the rest of the winter.

*2" wide X 10-12" long.
** $60.00 back up camera /6" screen.
 
   / snowblower and rocks #10  
I have good fine gravel on my driveway so accidentally catching it now and then does not damage anything. But it is depressing to see the precious gravel blown into the field. As paulfun9 suggests, I plan to level and reduce the crown on my driveway before winter. Mine is a rear pull-type blower which I recommend if you want to ease back/neck strain, and it lets you keep the loader as mentioned by paulfun9.

While my driveway has good gravel, I do some neighbours' driveways and bent my auger on one neighbour's new driveway last year. We cleared all the large rocks. However, it is on a steep side hill and a large rock must have dislodged during a spring thaw before a heavy snow. It must have rolled onto the road before getting covered with snow. It made a heck of a noise and broke the shear pin. But it also bent the auger. I never did find the rock! I think the bent auger was bad luck in how the rock lodge against the cutting edge before the pin gave way. I still need to straighten the auger before this winter.

I broke a shear pin the previous year on another neighbour's driveway with no damage. We since hauled good gravel for that drive way and it was good last year.

If I just cleared my driveway I would not break any pins.

I am also a fan of packing down the first light snows to get a good base. But I always seem to have a small gravel-spray foul up when things soften in the spring.
 

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