You can get by with the small resi if you add a oil cooler.
It just so happens I have a rather nice one that I'm not currently using - has it's own thermostatically-controlled electric fan on it
The one item that's bothering me with your calculations is the low system pressure.
I'm just mulling it over, trying to make sure I've got it fully understooded ...
Building pressure is largely evidence that the system is encountering work (resistance) to be done ... but at the same time in order for the blower to accomplish any real work that would be acceptable it has to operate at a certain speed (flow) ...
In terms of (theoretical) performance, there's probably a sweet spot there somewhere ...
The pressure relief valve I was looking at is adjustable from 1500 to 3000 psi, so I'd have the option of "tweaking" the system to "tune" it.
I can run the numbers using the
Surplus Center hydraulic calculators to come up with a pump/motor combination that will deliver more pressure given my horsepower constraints. Going in that direction, requires using a motor with a smaller displacement, to keep the speed that the blower is spinning within an acceptable range (around 500 rpm)
Of course, the problem with that is the potential speed of the blower when it isn't under load but is free-wheeling ...
I'd be designing for 2950 psi.
But the problem with that is the flow you'd get with horsepower available - only around 10 gpm.
At 2000 psi, the flow would be more like 16 gpm ... which is actually doable with the PTO hp available.
Of course, full flow at max pressure will take even more hp.
Exactly ... to get 16 gpm @ 3000 psi you're looking at something in the neighborhood of 33 hp ... which is 50% more horsepower that I have available.
I think a key point that others have made earlier in this thread, is that this an HST tractor we're talking about ... and since I can vary the groundspeed, I can control the load that I'm placing on the blower.
Whether I'd have to slow it down so much that it would be unacceptable is an open question.
We're at the bottom of the Lake Erie/Northeast Ohio snowbelt and we generally don't get a lot of snow at one time. Big snow events usually occur once or twice a year ... if at all. If I lived 20 or 30 miles further north it would be an entirely different deal - since the yearly snowfall might be double of what it is here.
I mounted a blower on the front of my tractor once. Used a chain drive to drop the pto below the rear axle and then a couple of universal joints and drive shafts brought the power forward. System worked really well and I was really disappointed when I sold the tractor and the new owner didn't want the blower.
Yeah ... it kinda sucks when someone doesn't appreciate fine engineering and execution ...
