Snowblowing rules of thumb

   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #1  

smfcpacfp

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2007
Messages
1,314
Location
Sands Township, Marquette Co, Michigan
Tractor
Kubota B3030HSDC
As I contemplate the possible need to get the snowblower out tomorrow, I have developed some snow blowing "rules of thumb" over the years that some of you newbies to snow blowing may want to consider. I figure that I have moved about 5,700 inches of snow with my three snow blowing rigs over the last 29 years. Snowblowing is my favorite winter activity, now that IO have a heated cab. Feel free to add to my list, I am always looking for new techniques:

RULE 1. Don't put your hand in the moving augers. This is an obvious one. I have occassionaly stuck a broom handle down the chute in the spring with the blower running, but that is about as dumb as I get. I have develped a fondness for my appendages over the years.

RULE 2. Make sure all of the crap that can break your blower and shear pins are out of the way, before the first snow.. When I have broken shear pins, it was always at the beginning of the season when a stray piece of firewood got in the way.

RULE 3. When you are going to have a major storm, if you can, clean driveway in increments. Why stress the equipment and yourself? Anyway snowblowing with my rig is fun. If the snow I just blew drifts back into the driveway, I just do it again - twice as much fun with the same snow.

RULE 4. Always clean all of the snow off of your equipment when you are done. I learned this the hard way the second time that I snow blowed. The snow blower was making a **** of a racket when I started it, and then I noticed black smoke coming from the drive belts in the back. So I shut it down and called the dealer. "Didn't you clean out the augers and impeller after you finished? When the snow melts it freezes on the bottom of the impeller assembly such that the impeller won't turn." Duh, nobody told me to do that.

Now I clean off everything, but especially anything that if frozen could make it difficult to start the machine. With my current rig, I wipe all of the water off of the cab that I can get to, clean off the wiper blades and pull them away from the wind shield. Of course, it helps if you have a garage. I also put a piece of wood below the blower so it doesn't freeze to the floor.

RULE 5. Make sure nothing critical is frozen when you start blowing. This is a continuation of what I said in 4. If you have a rig like mine (which shuts off the tractor if no one is in the seat when a PTO device is engaged) put a mirror where you can see that the impeller and augers are spinning freely and the chute rotation is working freely before you have at it.

RULE 6. Never put the blower on the ground on a gravel driveway the first time you use it, unless you enjoy changing sheer bolts. This rule is just for those of us who don't have a paved driveway. I have a gravel driveway, so a good first season snowblowing is a key to no problem for the rest of the winter.

Like everyone else we get a few snow falls early where you know it is going to melt, so this next step is the one I take when we get our first real snowfall. First I run my SUV up-and-down the driveway until the snow is packed down into the gravel before I snow blow for the first time. Then I run the blower but keep it off the ground about an inch. This way the ground will freeze better for future efforts. The next time I run the blower on the ground with the skid plates as low as they go. We don't get much thawing once the snow starts in earnest.


RULE 7. When the snow is deep, take smaller cuts of snow. My first run in the snow is very very slow if it deep, usually painfully slow. My next cut might be a half of the width of the blower or less. I would rather make more runs and use a little more fuel, then be replacing belts as I did with my old snowblower, or stressing the drive mechanism on my current tractor.

The guy who wrote the Kubota snowblower manual obviously has never used a snow blower before. It says in deep snow take the top layer off and work your way down. To me this is nonsensical. You're going to be driving a tractor in the deep snow and making a general mess. How about just taking a narrower cut of the snowblower potential? Anyway I have been doing this and it has saved many a belt on my old snowblower.

A couple of HD movies on my current rig in action:

Kubota B3030 HSDC snowblowing Jan 2012 (HD) - YouTube

Kubota B3030 Snowblowing on 1/02/2012 - YouTube

Old Kimpex Snowblower on Yamaha Big Bear ATV
Yamaha_Snow_blower.jpg


Current rig:

Left-front-Kubota-driveway.jpg


Right-quarter-panel-Kubota-.jpg
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #3  
Sound good except the multiple cuts / #3 rule. Just get an HST or more hp so you can do it in one swipe!
 
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   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #4  
Make sure the neighbors cat is in! Shot snow over the bank and low and behold a grey streak came up over the bank as it was being pelted by the blown snow. Guess the cat was hiding behind the bank from the tractor!
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #5  
Make sure the neighbors cat is in! Shot snow over the bank and low and behold a grey streak came up over the bank as it was being pelted by the blown snow. Guess the cat was hiding behind the bank from the tractor!

neighbour put one of his barn cats through the blower as he approached the cat door on his shop... :(
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #6  
I have a couple of pieces of scrap 2x4 that I put under the skids when it's parked in the garage. As the snow melts off the blower and tractor I can sweep it towards the drain much easier.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #7  
My personal snow blowing rule: No cab, no snow blower.

I believe God created snow plows just for that reason. ;)
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #8  
We just leave it outside as it stays below freezing for months at a time here. Sometimes the heat from the gearbox will melt the skim in the drum and let it freeze in the bottom sticking the fan. I have a big bar to pound that ice out.

I have a couple of pieces of scrap 2x4 that I put under the skids when it's parked in the garage. As the snow melts off the blower and tractor I can sweep it towards the drain much easier.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #9  
Watch out for stored energy. My b-i-l 's walk behind plugged up so being wise he completely shut off the motor to clear it out. He didn't realize that the blower fan had a spring in it and when the blockage let go so did the end of his finger.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #10  
Even tho I am in town on a corner lot. I use a small air compressor and try to blow all the loose snow off of my two stage toro and my craftsman trac drive. I use the craftsman and son uses the toro. Put both off of the garage floor,on a small platform with swivel wheels.
Move them over close to the drain and blow off. Sweep the snow on the drain. Fill gas and check oil, look for loose bolts, belts. In general look them over for anything out of the ordinary.
Even tho I am in the beautiful city of Wellton, Arizona. There is a chance I might have to have a little fun "AHEM" work blowing snow when I get home on the night of the 17 or early morning of the 18.
Have to travel trucks and a machine to Yermo California, then travel to Las Vegas for safety rules classes on the 14,15 and a foremans meeting the 16, then travel home thru FIVE states.
Bring on the snow!!!!!!

T.J.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb
  • Thread Starter
#11  
I live in the boondocks with my nearest neigbors house a couple of football fields away, so I don't have to worry about disturbing my neighbors with snowblowing issues and my newspaper goes in the newspaper box, so I don't have some of the issues that you guys face.

Terry, you gave me a great idea. I never thought to use my air compressor to clean off the blower when finished. I keep it right by my pole building door that I bring the tractor in. I keep it about 10 feet from my tractor. I will definitely use it the next time. Our snow is usually fairly dry. Last night and today we had 8" of snow when the temperature was in the low teens, so the air compressor would have worked just fine.

I wouldn't enjoy snowblowing as much I do if I had an open station tractor and a rear blower.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #12  
To prevent freezing of the 2nd stage, I clean it out as best as I can and then I spray Prestone De-Icer into the drum. Have not had a problem since.

Those who are new to snow blowing will also let the box fill up before engaging the auger, resulting in early shear pin replacement. Lots of fun when the box is packed with wet snow.

Change the chute direction before passing the windows of your house. Was watching the neighbor use his walk behind unit when he launched a frozen newspaper through his dining room window once.

Always use the wind to your advantage, you will stay drier.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #13  
What is the consensus on dragging the snowblower to pack down the snow in a gravel driveway the first storm?. I have always done this but dont know how many other do..I also keep a few paths packed down in the woods for the wife to walk on. I do the same thing there just raise the snowblower a bit when i start to get hung up..

I also leave my tractor outside and dont clean off the snowblower ..I rarely need to knock any ice off to free it up..

From today's small 15 cm storm..not sure if it will work..

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?f...979612228.8551.100000384786604&type=1&theater

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=347582875264536
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #14  
ay66v:
Default Re: Snowblowing rules of thumb
My personal snow blowing rule: No cab, no snow blower.

I believe God created snow plows just for that reason.


I have that setup and working on making a shield in the back. It's not safe to be sitting there and waiting for the rocks to hit you.
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #15  
My personal snow blowing rule: No cab, no snow blower.

I believe God created snow plows just for that reason. ;)

I will add some heat to your statement: No cab, no heater, no snow blower, :laughing:. KC :D :D :D
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #16  
Make sure the neighbors cat is in! Shot snow over the bank and low and behold a grey streak came up over the bank as it was being pelted by the blown snow. Guess the cat was hiding behind the bank from the tractor!

Could've been worse. My blower would eat a Labrador without a hiccup.

OTOH, I have buried my kids with a stream of blown snow...on purpose, of course.

JayC
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #17  
As I contemplate the possible need to get the snowblower out tomorrow, I have developed some snow blowing "rules of thumb" over the years that some of you newbies to snow blowing may want to consider. I figure that I have moved about 5,700 inches of snow with my three snow blowing rigs over the last 29 years. Snowblowing is my favorite winter activity, now that IO have a heated cab. Feel free to add to my list, I am always looking for new techniques:

Good post! Mostly old news for me, but great to put it out there.

I think I might've learned the "clean it off when your done" rule from you last year. I have yet to have a freeze-up condition, but I could see it happen.

I'd like to re-iterate the "clean up the driveway BEFORE the first snow" concept - that is the one most ignored, and probably the most important. I have a long drive and a couple of fairly large parking areas - I make sure that there is nothing that I wouldn't want sucked through my blower w/in 5 feet of the drive/parking edges.

I'd also add: Don't chop your throttle before the blower clears. If you do, it can pack up, break all your shear pins, then will turn into a 600# block of concrete filling every crevasse of your blower - which turns into a half hour with a pick before you can get going again - and that doesn't count changing the shear pins. Every shear pin I've broken so far was broken by doing this.

JayC
 

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   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #18  
I do that here to make roads for logging in the winter. Makes a nice smooth hardpack trail. I don't do it on the driveway as it needs to sit overnight to harden up. I just try to plow the first few snows to move the rocks away.

What is the consensus on dragging the snowblower to pack down the snow in a gravel driveway the first storm?. I have always done this but dont know how many other do..I also keep a few paths packed down in the woods for the wife to walk on. I do the same thing there just raise the snowblower a bit when i start to get hung up..

I also leave my tractor outside and dont clean off the snowblower ..I rarely need to knock any ice off to free it up..

From today's small 15 cm storm..not sure if it will work..

Christopher West's Photos | Facebook

Feb 12, 2012 9:31am | Facebook
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb
  • Thread Starter
#19  
What is the consensus on dragging the snowblower to pack down the snow in a gravel driveway the first storm?. I have always done this but dont know how many other do..I also keep a few paths packed down in the woods for the wife to walk on. I do the same thing there just raise the snowblower a bit when i start to get hung up..

I also leave my tractor outside and dont clean off the snowblower ..I rarely need to knock any ice off to free it up..

From today's small 15 cm storm..not sure if it will work..

Christopher West's Photos | Facebook

Feb 12, 2012 9:31am | Facebook

I enjoyed your movie, but you have something we don't have here - pink snow!:laughing:
 
   / Snowblowing rules of thumb #20  
Jay- where are your tire chains?

I'd add to the list of snow-blowing rules to refill the fuel when you are finished. I like the CLEAN IT OFF part, but getting the fuel refilled will make the next trip nicer [and less chance of drawing moisture into the tank!]:thumbsup:
 

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