Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me?

   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #1  

jchewie

Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2014
Messages
39
Location
Michigan UP
Tractor
Ford 3000
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.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #2  
With the prevailing wind and the county plow this area has a tendency to drift shut overnight.

Personally, anything without a cab, I would scratch off my list, but thats just me.
A front mount blower with loader sounds nice, like you said, you could always add a plow to the bucket later.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #3  
SAND?????
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #4  
your entire thread is about snow. and nothing else about property and re purposing the machine for other tasks.

with above said, driveway and purely snow, i would say a skid steer. due to maneuverability. your able to turn on a dime, and instantly change directions. other words mid way down the drive, and you need to push some snow back further. your able to turn right there, and do just that. a tractor on other hand. your back and forth constantly and a lot of time is consumed simply trying to turn some. and even then ya end up in the yard and at weird angles. that really do not accomplish the job at hand very well. of simply pushing some snow back further in a given area.

it has been to long since i last looked at skid steers. so i am out of the loop on them. as far as some sort of front window (were ya climb in), not sure if they just offer a piece of plastic with some buttons, or if they make a flip up window or like to keep the snow from blowing back on you.

i am not sure if you would need tracks for ice/snow ((majority of what i see notated)) is tracts over wheels. i can not remember the correct acronym something like TTO or OTT for the tracks over wheels. tire tracks over wheels?

the only big issue with skid steers is they do not have a high MPH option, they have a slower top speed, but being your not driving down the road or like. that really should not be an issue. if you had large acreage say 10 to 20 plus acreage driving from one end to other end = really slow and time consuming. and a tractor might be more suggested for "re purposing" the unit for non winter stuff.

the other thing ya need to double check on is "ground clearance" there are industrial units, and then you might find more of a mud/snow units with higher ground clearance, so you can move through some deeper stuff without getting stuck.

most implements for a skid steer = costlier vs a generic 3pt hitch stuff for a regular tractor.

you are more likely to get a "quick attach" with a skid steer, making it easier to swap out implements, from a snow blower, to a general duty bucket, to a snow pusher, to other.

===============
personally, would like to have a skid steer, they can be very powerful little machines that can get into tight little spots, and everything attaches out in front of you. i would most likely gotten one, if it was not for the farm and needing to go from one end to other end of property.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #5  
With that much snow a blower is the only way to go.With your budget the used machine even without a cab is viable.I personally don't care for Skid Steers because of the limited visibility.You can always fabricate some kind of cab.500 hours is just starting to break in for a Kubota.
The tractor can be used for other purposes down the road.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #6  
That's a lot of snow! My first choice would be head south. But if your set on staying a cab tractor with heat would definitely be my choice. I would definitely want a blower (5' min for me). The only thing I would be undecided on would be front mount or rear mount so u can keep a front loader on to scrap out the ice. I like bx's but I think you should up size a bit with that much snow. Also with the low financing available hopefully u could get one sooner rather than later. Good luck. Keep us posted, we wood love to see some pics of a new tractor in your drive.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #7  
Your driveway isn't that long but man, that's a lot of snow. You probably aren't going to get into anything new for 10k. Skid steers are very nice, a lot of power and they do a lot of other stuff. That would also be an advantage of having a tractor, you could mow with it, use the FEL for other stuff etc. Can you stand to be in the cold on an open platform? A cab would be nice but might be out of your price range.

For me a SCUT or CUT would be perfect with a FEL and rear mounted blower. If you have other projects and can afford attachments, skid steers are nice but even used pricey.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
SAND?????

Excellent suggestion. Regular spreading of a few bags of mason sand a week wouldn't be that expensive, but it won't help deal with a big pile from raking the roof either.


skid steer
Talking with a couple other people regarding skid steers, I'm probably going to get stuck in my yard clearing snow late fall and early spring, then wouldn't be able to use it out there at all until summer. Low drainage, clay soil. However, I would have the machine to raise the yard up pretty easy.:)



I do have 10 acres, 1.5 acres is yard, mowed with a basic lawn tractor, most of the remainder is former pasture/hayfield.
I can borrow/barter a tractor with rotary cutter for a day in the summer pretty easily from neighbors.
Usually repay with something they need, whether its fuel or hydraulic fluid, or motor oil.
This is not the case in the winter.

A loader would be handy around the house, primarily for firewood, but I have done fine with the utility trailer and a wheelbarrow.

This purchase is primarily to deal with the snow. If I was buying for general puttering I would get an old 2 cylinder Deere of some sort.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #9  
In my opinion, if you had a FEL on a small tractor, you would use it more than you think. I know I do.
 
   / Snowblower + FEL, SCUT, CUT, Skid steer, what will work best for me? #10  
i still say if just for snow a skid steer. 180', ya it is some distance... but i would say some landscaping is in order, for a walking path between home/shed regardless of what you get.

if it is to wet out, it doesn't matter if it is a skid steer, tractor, truck, walking, wheel barrow. ya going to sink and make a mess, and get stuck. doesn't matter what you have, and it will take a longer time clean up the mess that you made. ya simply gotta wait it out till things dry up. all there is to it.

on other hand SCUT more likely due ya better. on the re-purposing of the machine. finish mower, if other mower breaks down, rotatory cutting, driveway maintenance, etc...

get out to some dealers and test drive different size machines to get a feel for them. all machines are able to do what you want. i doubt you will need to get into 30HP unit.. maybe some were in the 20HP maybe 25HP range SCUT would be pushing upper limits. anything over that and ya getting a bigger tractor to get job done quicker. "within reason". i would say if issue comes up of bigger tractor with extreme basics. vs a smaller tractor with all the little options. i would push for all the smaller tractor with the specific tractor smaller options. granted when ya in the SCUT's there is a lot of little things that are left out vs larger tractors (not enough room to cram all the crud into a smaller machine) but they get the job done. and have enough features to get folks by without much effort.

((split breaks / rear wheel steering breaks on opposite foot of the gas/go pedal / hst peddle)) is a big time number one must have for me. don't care if it has 4wd / MFWD i need to be able to turn. and if you have a FEL and doing any sort of work with it, you may not have front steering as wheels come off ground or have little contact with it.

bigger machine to get stuff done quicker = more likely HP for the PTO, for a wider snow blower. 1 foot more width = a lot more $$$$.
 

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