jchewie
Member
I asked a couple questions in this thread, but didn't want to derail it further.
I live in Michigan's Upper Peninsula with a seasonal average of 125 inches of snow in my area.
Here's what I need to clear:
180' asphalt driveway (drive + two driveway widths on each side to give the wind blown snow somewhere to drift, works great so I normally only have to blow once a day)
180' path to barn over grass, double snowblower width
80' path from driveway to propane tank over grass, double snowblower width
It would be nice to clear another 80' around the house over grass but not required.
I have a walk behind 28" Ariens that clears up to about 8 inches of snow ok, but gets a real workout in 18 inches of snow. There are several passes every night that are 18" + deep drifted snow, plus the paths pretty much drift shut daily. The walk behind snowblower handles this, but it is tough and slow going.
Plowing this area with a truck or tractor or pushing with a snow pusher box is out due to the layout of the house, outbuildings, yard, and prevailing wind.
I would like a tractor mounted snowblower to do these tasks. Front mounted *seems* like it would be the cat's meow, but I could certainly work with a rear mounted TPH blower.
Here's where I need additional advice - there are a few things the walk behind cannot do:
1) The county plow throws hard packed snow and ice 30' up the end of the drive.
The walk behind gets most, but not all, of this, even with the skids adjusted up so the scraper bar runs on the ground.
Given a couple months, even with daily clearings, this area becomes layered hard ice and snow - mostly ice.
Then the FWD vehicles crunch through the top layer of ice and wind up stuck - they only need a little push or pull but you aren't going anywhere until they get it.
Temperatures stay consistently cold enough that salt doesn't cut through this.
In the past I used a spud and chipped it all out by hand over the course of several days but need a different solution this year.
Chipping or scraping this hardpack away is a twice a winter task if I let it build up to six inches or so (or more frequent if required because of a smaller machine)
2) There is a deep steep ditch parallel with the road at the end of the drive. I clear to the edge of the ditch with the blower. The ditch drifts full, then keeps drifting up where the snowblower and county plow dump snow, but it is never firm enough to walk on and run the walk behind snowblower over in order to clear two full driveway widths on either side like I do in the yard. With the prevailing wind and the county plow this area has a tendency to drift shut overnight. I need something to reach out over the ditch a couple feet to remove at least the face of the drift when it gets too tall. This is a once a month activity.
3) This year was the first year I had to rake the roof. The resulting pile was 6 feet high, 6 feet wide, and 60 feet long. I used a snow shovel and scooped it all into small manageable sized chunks that the walk behind could disperse in the yard. If the wind stays low this will be a once a month activity.
My wrists and hands will no longer put up with prolonged spudding, chopping, or scooping, so I really need to select the right tools to manage these tasks.
Can a front or rear facing tractor mounted snowblower accomplish #1 and #3? If so, I can live with #2.
Is the typical loader on a SCUT up to these tasks?
If not, would I need to step up to a CUT or Utility tractor?
Should I start shopping for a well used skid steer?
What won't wreck the asphalt or tear up the yard too bad? I see several posts on expedient blade guards that look simple and cost effective - pipe, rubber, UHMW.
Massey, Kubota, and Deere dealers are in the area.
I stopped in to the Kubota dealer and talked briefly with a salesman about a BX series tractor.
I could be talked into spending as much as $20k on this, but it would have to wait a couple years. I really want to keep it about half that.
Less is even better, but the used market in the immediate area in winter time is near nonexistent.
A guy at work is considering selling his late 90s B series Kubota with front mounted blower and FEL. 5XX hours, thinking about asking $10k. No cab. I'm going to ask to try it out this week.
I'm very familiar with wrenching on stuff but also have four kids. I will not fight worn out junk in subzero temperatures in my unheated barn. I'm probably going to be in the area for a long time, and would like to purchase the right tools.
Thank you for your advice!
From tractorgp's second video in the post it looks like a blower, plus a FEL mounted plow would work fantastic.
I live in Michigan's Upper Peninsula with a seasonal average of 125 inches of snow in my area.
Here's what I need to clear:
180' asphalt driveway (drive + two driveway widths on each side to give the wind blown snow somewhere to drift, works great so I normally only have to blow once a day)
180' path to barn over grass, double snowblower width
80' path from driveway to propane tank over grass, double snowblower width
It would be nice to clear another 80' around the house over grass but not required.
I have a walk behind 28" Ariens that clears up to about 8 inches of snow ok, but gets a real workout in 18 inches of snow. There are several passes every night that are 18" + deep drifted snow, plus the paths pretty much drift shut daily. The walk behind snowblower handles this, but it is tough and slow going.
Plowing this area with a truck or tractor or pushing with a snow pusher box is out due to the layout of the house, outbuildings, yard, and prevailing wind.
I would like a tractor mounted snowblower to do these tasks. Front mounted *seems* like it would be the cat's meow, but I could certainly work with a rear mounted TPH blower.
Here's where I need additional advice - there are a few things the walk behind cannot do:
1) The county plow throws hard packed snow and ice 30' up the end of the drive.
The walk behind gets most, but not all, of this, even with the skids adjusted up so the scraper bar runs on the ground.
Given a couple months, even with daily clearings, this area becomes layered hard ice and snow - mostly ice.
Then the FWD vehicles crunch through the top layer of ice and wind up stuck - they only need a little push or pull but you aren't going anywhere until they get it.
Temperatures stay consistently cold enough that salt doesn't cut through this.
In the past I used a spud and chipped it all out by hand over the course of several days but need a different solution this year.
Chipping or scraping this hardpack away is a twice a winter task if I let it build up to six inches or so (or more frequent if required because of a smaller machine)
2) There is a deep steep ditch parallel with the road at the end of the drive. I clear to the edge of the ditch with the blower. The ditch drifts full, then keeps drifting up where the snowblower and county plow dump snow, but it is never firm enough to walk on and run the walk behind snowblower over in order to clear two full driveway widths on either side like I do in the yard. With the prevailing wind and the county plow this area has a tendency to drift shut overnight. I need something to reach out over the ditch a couple feet to remove at least the face of the drift when it gets too tall. This is a once a month activity.
3) This year was the first year I had to rake the roof. The resulting pile was 6 feet high, 6 feet wide, and 60 feet long. I used a snow shovel and scooped it all into small manageable sized chunks that the walk behind could disperse in the yard. If the wind stays low this will be a once a month activity.
My wrists and hands will no longer put up with prolonged spudding, chopping, or scooping, so I really need to select the right tools to manage these tasks.
Can a front or rear facing tractor mounted snowblower accomplish #1 and #3? If so, I can live with #2.
Is the typical loader on a SCUT up to these tasks?
If not, would I need to step up to a CUT or Utility tractor?
Should I start shopping for a well used skid steer?
What won't wreck the asphalt or tear up the yard too bad? I see several posts on expedient blade guards that look simple and cost effective - pipe, rubber, UHMW.
Massey, Kubota, and Deere dealers are in the area.
I stopped in to the Kubota dealer and talked briefly with a salesman about a BX series tractor.
I could be talked into spending as much as $20k on this, but it would have to wait a couple years. I really want to keep it about half that.
Less is even better, but the used market in the immediate area in winter time is near nonexistent.
A guy at work is considering selling his late 90s B series Kubota with front mounted blower and FEL. 5XX hours, thinking about asking $10k. No cab. I'm going to ask to try it out this week.
I'm very familiar with wrenching on stuff but also have four kids. I will not fight worn out junk in subzero temperatures in my unheated barn. I'm probably going to be in the area for a long time, and would like to purchase the right tools.
Thank you for your advice!
From tractorgp's second video in the post it looks like a blower, plus a FEL mounted plow would work fantastic.