to blow or to plow?

   / to blow or to plow? #31  
Everyones situations different. We get over 10 feet a year and if you look at my avatar you see my snowbucket. I use a 7 foot scraper blade on the back and use that for the paved areas which I can do faster than with a rear mounted snowblower. BUT I also do down to the horse pastures and run out of room to push the snow pretty quickly, so then I'll throw on the blower and get rid of the banks by blowing them up over the pasture fence. When the banks get to big on the paved portion I also use the blower to get rid of them. (I would do it differently if I had a front blower and hydro. Only having a rear blower with only two rear speeds limits me a little bit and is not an optimal set up since many times low gear is too slow but high gear is always too fast)
 
   / to blow or to plow? #32  
I move snow in 3 driveways ranging from 100 feet to 1500 feet long every day in the winter. % foot blower on the back and 5 foot bucket on the front. The blower is much better at clearing snow cause you never really stop moving where as a blade or bucket your pushing to the side and backing up to push again. My opinion, Blower all the way!
P.S. Our snow is measured in feet every snow fall.
 
   / to blow or to plow? #33  
I would have to agree with Wedge40. I live in an area where we measure snow in feet.

When you get a blower, you want a front blower also, unless you don't mind looking over your shoulder and getting a stiff neck.

Where is TR anyway?
 
   / to blow or to plow? #34  
Well in our area (NE WA) we had the worst winter on record (08-09). We just have our Ford 1720 with a back blader and the JD loader. But we also have lots of room to push/dump the snow out of the way. :)

Here's what our winter looked like:

100_1890.jpg


This was my doing...had to "rake" the roof and then I shoveled the sidewalk...I wanted Tom to be able get firewood in. :) Our low temps were in the -20's.

100_1883.jpg


And towards the end of winter we could just climb up the snow berms to get on the roof.

JamieDD
 
   / to blow or to plow? #35  
I did the snow removal for the ICBM missile site for 6 years in North Dakota (along with other things)
Mostly, we had a big payloader and pushed the snow. By the end of the snow season we had mountains of snow in the yard around the site. Eventually, they tried the Bobcat with a blower. Both had there uses and I told the higher ups that BOTH are what you need to keep the site clean. On the access roads the blower was best as it took the snow 50' off the edge- it ground it up so the snow was 10% of its original bulk
At home I has a Sears Craftsman Blower attached to my tractor. It was great for plowing into the snow banks and eliminating them. During the winters, the snow would build up (Not to UP standards) and restrict the parking in my house. I'd take the craftsman and destroy the banks-eating up the snow and literally "cleaning" my front yard of almost all snow. Because it ground up the snow to less than it was, it almost erased all the snow in my yard. I'd do this for the neighbors too, they appreciated the extra parking and now having someplace to put the next snowfall.

My vote, Snowblower
 
   / to blow or to plow? #36  
To plow any significant amount of snow requires good traction - either a good set of chains or 4wd with industrial or ag type tire tread. Plowing deep snow on blacktop can cause damage if you spin the wheels using chains. If you go with 4wd make sure you have weight enough and power enough for whatever is normal snowfalls in your area. I haven't used a mounted blower but I hear they work fine however they may be slower than a good plow setup. Front mounted equipment is easier on the operator but rear mounted stuff works just as well. We don't get as much snow in eastern NY as the western part and the deep snow guys seem to favor a blower. I'd go with whatever works for others in your area. Anyway, shopping now in the offseason should get you a discount from dealers. Good luck.
 
   / to blow or to plow? #37  
I am going through the same quandry, blade or blower. I currently have a plow on my Ford Excursion, a plow on my quad, and a front end loader on my kubota b2400. The plow on my Ex I use at the office parking lot. It works at home, but pretty tight quarters. The quad does OK with the plow, but I need to stack the snow higher than what it allows. I am considering selling the quad and plow, and putting a front mount blower on my kubota (did I mention that it has a heated cab?). Most of our snows are 3"-6". Will a blower get down to the pavement? Any thoughts?
 
   / to blow or to plow? #38  
36 Tango -- for your application I would get a rear mount pull forward blower and leave the fel in place. Compared to your current setups you will wonder why you used them:eek: While the blower might not always get down to pavement it will also not damage it and it will get off as much as a plow if you use it before the surface gets packed by driving on it. In this neck of the woods all the "pros" are using pull forward blowers on tractors -- plows went by the wayside quite some time ago for a reason -- snow placement and damage to the push vehicle and suroundings mostly-- JMHO
regards
 
   / to blow or to plow? #39  
Our winters are all different, sometimes not too much snow sometimes lots of snow. One thing is we seldom get mid winter thaws so snow that falls in November is still there in March. I much prefer the snow blower, especially with hydrostatic. My first tractor was gear with the 3pt blower, usually either too fast or too slow, when the snow drifted even low range became too fast. The next tractor was hydrostatic so always had a good speed for the amount of snow.
This summer I bought a front mount blower for the current Kubota, they were on sale. I am actually looking forward to snow removal again, heated cab and front mount blower:D, can't be better than that.
 
   / to blow or to plow? #40  
Pull forward or front mount seem to be the trend in blowers here too, though many still plow.
I run a 10' blade on my NH ls160, are snows are generally only 12" of less though, and I rarely plow during the storm. So I guess we don't have big snow. The blade has the advantage of quickly gathering the snow up because of a high travel speed (5 to 7 mph) and wide width.

Where blower must often travel slower (good thing because they have no trip on the cutting edge.) But a blower would be nice in the areas where there is no place to put the pile because it can blow the snow over things on the yards edge or into the trees, etc. 1 Pass and its done.
Depends on your situation as to which tool, but 1 thing for sure, forward travel is worth the price.
Ken
 
 

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