Snowblower 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting

   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #1  

DRFoster

Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2000
Messages
39
Location
Utah
Tractor
Kubota B2710
I was wondering what's the proper way to have a 3pt snowblower adjusted. By adjusting, I'm refering to the angle of the snowblower as it sits on the ground as controlled by the top bar (that screws longer or shorter.)

I originally tried having the snowblower sit level on the ground. What I find is that the snowblower leaves 1/2" or so of snow. If I readjust it so that its angled slightly lower in the rear, I get a clean scrap as I snowblow. I'm worried about wearing something out faster than normal using it at this (small) angle. Note that my snowblower doesn't have an adjustable scrapper bar underneath the way my old walk-behind Toro did.

Any opinions?

FYI: I have a 5' Farm King blower on the back of a Kubota B2710. The manual that came with the blower is no help in about this.
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #2  
One important consideration are the PTO shaft angles - the angle between the PTO/PTO Shaft and the PTO Shaft/Gear Box should be approx. the same. Any significant difference will induce premature wear of the PTO universal joints. If you don't have adjustable skid shoes and everything is adjusted correctly, you might end up having to add (weld or bolt) an extension on the leading edge. I take it you have a nice smooth paved surface you are trying to clear.....
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting
  • Thread Starter
#3  
The PTO angles on both ends are pretty much the same. I don't change it enough with my "adjustment" to change them much. I'm just eyeballing the angles, but they're pretty close.

Yes, everything I keep clear is smooth black top.
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #4  
DRFoster, I've a 5' Lucknow and 1300' gravel road and another 250' asphalt drive. For the gravel I angle that lower edge up to leave a 1/2 to 3/4 inch layer of snow that hardpacks around the loose gravel so I'm not picking the gravel up and blowing it off. After that, I change the angle to a more aggressive angle like I use on the asphalt.

RCH
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting
  • Thread Starter
#5  
In reading through my snowblower manual (for about the 5th time), it does mention how to adjust it. It just talks about it in a section away from where I thought it should be.

Anyway, the adjustment I've made (tilting it slightly lower on the cutting edge than the PTO end) is exactly what the manual says. To quote the manual:

"Depth of cut can be partially controlled by tilting the blower forward or backward. Adjust the top link of the tractor hitch so the snowblower is just slightly tilted back when resting on the ground. CAUTION: Excessive backward tilt may cause the "U" joints to flutter resulting in PTR shear bolt failure."
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #6  
Ray,
How do you like your LuckNow snow blower? Do you find that the large chute diameter helps with clogging, or does it limit the length of how far the snow will be thrown? I just got the same blower but with all of this warm weather I haven't had a chance to use it yet. If you have any insites to this unit please let me know.

18-30445-von.gif
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #7  
Von, I'm a little disappointed in the Lucknow snowblower. I've had it 11 years and I recall paying ~$1100. The chute rotation union promptly froze up but I fixed that with 4 zerts drilled around it to keep that space full of grease. The chain tightner for the horizontal gatherer (out on the right side of the machine) was a plastic shoe the lasted about a month. I replaced this with an idler gear like it should have had in the first place. I had to weld a piece between the chute rotational joint and the manuel cable crank to guide the cable so it wouldn't tangle and bind. The crank for the chute is too low to reach when the blower is down from the seat of my Ford 1910; I have to raise it to reposition the chute. I need a universal joint in the crank to angle the crank skyward to correct that. If your tractor is lower that may not be a ploblem. The gear box filler plug stripped it's threads and I run grease and STP in it for lubrication. The casting seems porous. The shear pin is a 1/4" bolt on the PTO joint at the tractor end that connects two lobes. The hole was drilled too far away from the center of the PTO shaft and sheared too easily. I had to drill a hole closer to the center line through the casting. Also, replacing that 1/4" bolt up under the PTO shield in the dark at 10 degrees F is a real pain in the keister. It will throw the snow only 15/20 feet but I'm going to try the Pam spray in the chute if it ever snows- a larger diameter 2nd stage for a higher tip speed is an important consideration. I have a gear tractor and it's difficult to go slow enough at full PTO speed.

RCH
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #8  
RCH,
Mine was made in 99' and does have an idler gear for the chain tightener. So the factory must have had enough complaints to make the same change. I have a B2710 and it does sit low enough to turn the handle when the blower is down. And there is a grease fitting for the chute so that must have been another upgrade the factory made. I have pavement so I hope to not have to repair any shear bolts, but they are not1/4" but are 3/8" grade 5. So this also must have been changed as well. If we get any snow I will let you know how it works.

18-30445-von.gif
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #9  
"Depth of cut can be partially controlled by tilting the blower forward or backward. Adjust the top link of the tractor hitch so the snowblower is just slightly tilted back when resting on the ground. CAUTION: Excessive backward tilt may cause the "U" joints to flutter resulting in PTR shear bolt failure."

DR, that's the exact same setup I have (60" Buhler Farm King on a Kubota B2710) and I'm having the same problem. But all of my work is gravel surface, so maybe I just need to play with it a bit next time it snows. How far off of straight vertical did you set yours to get the right height?
 
   / 3pt Snowblower - Adjusting #10  
Walterc....
This post was from 2001 and DR hasn't posted since 2003. I probably wouldn't expect to get your answer. Maybe someone else will chip in here.
 
 
 
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