10-09-2009, 08:06 PM
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#1 (permalink)
| | New Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 4
| Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower Hi,
I live in central NH and would like to get your opinion on the best way to get the snow off our driveway. The drive is hard packed gravel, 2000 feet long, varies between 10 and 15 feet wide, has 2 decent hills and drops off 3 feet to drainage ditches on both sides for most of its length.
I have a MF1533 and am torn between a 7' rear blade or a front mounted snow blower.
Thanks!!
Ed |
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10-09-2009, 08:12 PM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Platinum Member
Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Northwest Oregon (small town USA)
Posts: 644
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower I guess it depends on the amount of snow. I use my rear blade to remove snow around here. I cant wait to use it on my yanmar!
__________________ JohnDeere L118 2wd with R3s Yanmar 169D 4wd with loaded R1s Simplicity 9518 2wd with R3s (Rebuild)
Craftsman trailer, Modified KingKutterXB boxblade, Mitchel Field mower, Montana grader blade, JohnDeere imatch, Old rusty arena rake, and Modified & Restored Black palletforks Can you believe im only 14! Nothing runs like a Yanmar |
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10-09-2009, 08:18 PM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Veteran Member
Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: 4000\' mountains of Southern California
Posts: 1,989
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower Quote:
Originally Posted by moosehaven Hi,
I live in central NH and would like to get your opinion on the best way to get the snow off our driveway. The drive is hard packed gravel, 2000 feet long, varies between 10 and 15 feet wide, has 2 decent hills and drops off 3 feet to drainage ditches on both sides for most of its length.
I have a MF1533 and am torn between a 7' rear blade or a front mounted snow blower.
Thanks!!
Ed | Ed, any way that you can get both? If you get a rear blade, get a good one and get some skid shoes for it, they will help a lot. Sorry that I can't really help, we don't get all that much snow here. 
__________________ Brian |
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10-09-2009, 08:33 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 1
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower Both are ok but if you have alot of snow go with the blower, it'll send the snow 30 feet from your driveway, with the back blade you will create banks after a while ( unless you move it) the driveway gets narrow. As in the previous post, use both if possible
Harvey |
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10-09-2009, 08:34 PM
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#5 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2003 Location: Northern, New York
Posts: 1,552
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower What you need is a front mounted snow blade and a rear snowblower. The blower will give you extra rear weigh and can be used if the snow gets really deep. When you really learn how to use that snow blade you can scrape it down just like a road grader.
__________________ M-5040 w/cab, 05 RTV 900, Where the maple sap flows |
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10-09-2009, 08:36 PM
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#6 (permalink)
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Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 4
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower We get about 100 - 130" of snow each winter with a handful of storms that drop 12+ inches but the majority are 4-8 inches.
What sort of problems are you likely to encounter if the blade does not have skid shoes? |
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10-09-2009, 08:43 PM
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#7 (permalink)
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Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Johnstown, Pa
Posts: 69
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower I have a smaller GC2300. I too have a crushed stone driveway. It's 400 feet with 2 curves and one side that is fairly step. I found the rear blade to be marginal at best. I thought the skid shoes would help, they didn't. The 5 foot woods RB will push the rear of my tractor sideways if I try and plow more than a few inches at a time. I'm in the proces of pricing a front mount blade. Budget doesn't support a front blower at present. When/if we pave the driveway I'll look at a front blower.
The only drawback I see is a face full of snow when you are blowing and the wind shifts. Not much fun without a cab
__________________ Who is John Galt |
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10-09-2009, 08:54 PM
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#8 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Colorado
Posts: 260
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower rear blade works great for up to about 8 -10 inches of snow after that it takes several passes. I like running it backward facing early in the year when the drive is not yet really frozen. after it freezes good I can drag the blade front facing. even in bigger storms if you can keep up with it the rear blade works out ok. I have to plow and scoop with front bucket if I get a lot of snow and didn't get a chance to keep up as it accumulated. also blade works better for dry snow, wet heavy snow is a little harder to do. Snow blower is the way to go and I agree if you had both it would be pretty good setup, however I do like having the front bucket to move snow around if it stays around to long and perhaps clear ridges on the side as someone else mentioned. I made my driveway a little wider for that reason. I have read posts in the past about the discomfort of driving backwards with the rear blower if you have to go very far. I know I feel it just backing all the way down the drive and mine is only about 400 feet per side, it is a horseshoe shape and around 900 feet in total. so it seems it is up to you and really how much snow you get per storm. There are lots of post here about the subject of which attachment works best f you do search. hope this helps.
__________________ Bill |
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10-09-2009, 09:00 PM
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#9 (permalink)
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Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Central New Hampshire
Posts: 2,751
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower Really it might be a good idea to have both..... even if the blade is an inexpensive used one. I'm a huge fan of the front blowers, but small storms (only a few inches) are not their forte. We certainly get enough snow around here for a front blower for most storms though..... i couldn't go back to not having one. |
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10-09-2009, 09:11 PM
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#10 (permalink)
| | Veteran Member
Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: 4000\' mountains of Southern California
Posts: 1,989
| Re: Rear blade vs. front mount snow blower Quote:
Originally Posted by moosehaven We get about 100 - 130" of snow each winter with a handful of storms that drop 12+ inches but the majority are 4-8 inches.
What sort of problems are you likely to encounter if the blade does not have skid shoes? | Without the skid shoes, you will be more likely to tear up your road/driveway.
I have found that they stop the blade from gouging the road, but again we don't get all that much snow. Very seldom do we get more than 12" at a time and that usually melts before it snows again. 
__________________ Brian |
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