As far as I know the Kubota and Massey front blowers are made by RAD but the John Deere units are not. The specs available on either the Kubota or Massey sites for these absolutely STINK, as you've also found. There is NO info on these! I'm familiar with the John Deere designs. When I bought my X540 it came with the 44" JD front snowblower. But I sold it 3rd party and bought the Berco 3rd party also. All the smaller garden tractors and sub compact JD's seem to be painted yellow, and they all have common design elements. If I had to guess, my guess would be that Deere makes them. When you get more into the compact class and above, the front blowers are painted green and marketed as "Frontier". Not sure if Frontier is a division of JD, or just a partnership, like what Massey is doing with Woods currently.
As I was saying about the garden tractor JD blowers, they have similar design elements. They use plastic fan wheels, with rather large clearances between the drum, they use plastic chutes on all but the shaft driven models, augers are non-serrated. My 44" JD blower also had a very very light auger gear. It looked like a slightly larger unit than what you'd find on an MTD walk behind snowblower, where there are 2 halves of a case form fitted around the gear, filled with grease, not an oil bath. In the later 44" SB years they came out with at least an oil bath gear case, which is what the 47" belt and 47"/56" shaft driven units always had. There were only a few models that have a steel impeller though. The JD worked decent enough, but my Berco definitely out-throws.
The one good thing about the Deere blowers is they actually have some specs available. Below are the specs for the 44" and 47" models that were available for my X540. These are right out of the online owners manuals for the models on the Deere website. Note the impeller speed which is consistent with what I calculated for my Berco.
John Deere
44" Snowblower (X500 Series)
Overall Length 77.5 cm (30 1/2 in.)
Clearing Width 1.1m (43 1/4 in.)
Scraper Blade Replaceable
Height to top of housing 46cm (18 in.)
Height to top of spout 100cm (40 in.)
Auger Speed 110 rpm
Auger Diameter 30.5 cm (12 in.)
Impeller Speed 1060 rpm
Impeller Diameter 35.5 cm (14 in.)
Lift Height (above ground level) 10cm (4 in.)
Lift Height (below ground level) 5 cm (2 in.)
Discharge Chute Rotation 200 Degrees
Net Weight 82 kg (180 lb)
John Deere
47" Snowblower (X500 Series)
Overall Length : 88.9 cm (35 in.)
Clearing Width 1.20m (47 in.)
Scraper Blade Replaceable and Reversible
Height (to top of housing) 49cm (19 1/4 in.)
Height (to top of spout) 1.08m (42 1/2 in.)
Auger Speed 200 rpm
Auger Diameter 40.6 cm (16 in.)
Impeller Speed 1060 rpm
Impeller Diameter 38.1 cm (15 in.)
Lift Height (above ground level) 10cm (4 in.)
Lift Height (below ground level) 5 cm (2 in.)
Discharge Chute Rotation 200 Degrees
Net Weight 95 kg (210 lb)
I may have missed some important details. So you have a Kubota
M7040, is that what's equipped with the RAD snowblower? That's a pretty good size machine, how big is the width? At least 56"? More? Any idea the impeller diameter on that? Is this unit essentially identical more or less to the Kubota GR2728 or Massey 2360 that people have been complaining about regarding the shear bolt issues? If it's much bigger maybe that explains your 540 rpm impeller.
By the way, that's not necessarily an "easy" calculation as you mentioned to get the exact speed. I ran my numbers a few different ways assuming actual speed is based on pulley ratios measured at the midpoint of the belt, not just the pulley outer rim. Using this method provides an effective pulley diameter smaller than the overall pulley diameter. This reduction method does yield a slightly slower impeller speed, but I found it's still within the 1000 rpm order of magnitude. Once spring returns I'm going to try to get a measurement on the chain midpoint on my Dad's RAD to find out what that reduction is to the impeller. Looking at the parts diagram it's probably somewhere between a 2:1 or 3:1 reduction. If it really went from 2500 rpm to 540 rpm, that's a 4.6:1 reduction. It'd be a pretty big difference in sprocket sizes, something on the order of 1.5" and 7". They didn't look that drastic when I peered through the chain oil hole. I guess we'll find out come spring!
Also you're right, the Berco site doesn't give out speeds either. I only got the info I got by talking to their technician, it's always the same guy when I've had a technical question. He speaks both English and French, hopefully that's not my roadblock when I call RAD! Heck maybe I'll give Berco a call back too. I'm addicted to the throwing speed, but want more. I'd love to get 65-70'. I am an engineer by degree. I was looking back through my old dynamics books. I have some empirical data now from when I turned up the engine speed on the Deere to spec. So it threw about 38' at 3100 rpm and now about 50' at 3600 rpm. Turning up engine however is somewhat of a diminishing return because it's effect on impeller speed is diminished by the pulley reduction. However I'd love to play with some numbers and run the trajectory equation to see if I can get it to match my tested numbers, and predict what a change in pulley size could provide. The average linear impeller speed has a big impact on throwing distance, as the kinetic energy of the snow leaving the chute increases by the square of the increase of the velocity. A pulley size .5-1" less should be on the right order of magnitude. If I can find one from another Berco model that fits that'd be a good start. The proper size belt would be another question mark though I'd need to do some homework on. By the way how does your blower on the
M7040 throw? That's quite a bigger machine than my Massey 1240 which is on older 28hp compact class. I bet your blower really flings the snow!
Those upgrade kits are interesting, I hadn't seen that on there nor do I know what it was??? I took a second look and also saw a couple of bevel gears too, but they were in the $200 range.