dakotagun
Silver Member
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2012
- Messages
- 126
- Tractor
- JD 2305
Not saying blowers dont have their place, but IMO they are over hyped and over recommended here on the forum.
Yes, blowers do a cleaner job usually. And yes they move the snow farther away. So if you live in an area that gets LOTS of snow, then a blower may be the only option.
But they have their downfalls. As mentioned, they arent really good in the wet heavy snow, they are slower, they are messy especially with an open station machine, and they cost alot more.
And angled plow, weather it be a rear blade or front, is the fastest and most efficient way to get snow off the drive. And if you dont live in the mountains and have steep drops off the sides of the drive, you can get the snow far enough away that you wont have issues come late winter and no where to roll the snow to.
There is a reason you dont see all the contractors running around with blowers doing drives and parking lots.
And the big key around here.....dont get over aggressive about plowing just because you want to play with your new toy. If we get 3" of snow......and its supposed to warm up in 2 or 3 days.....I dont plow. 3" dont cause me any issues. Let it melt off naturally in a few days. Plowing will make a big pile that will take an extended warm up to completely melt off.
IF we get enough snow to warrant plowing, yes it makes big piles. But next time we get some warm weather that will melt some of it, I will spread the piles out to increase its surface area and help it to disappear.
Not saying blowers dont have their place, but IMO they are over hyped and over recommended here on the forum.
Yes, blowers do a cleaner job usually. And yes they move the snow farther away. So if you live in an area that gets LOTS of snow, then a blower may be the only option.
But they have their downfalls. As mentioned, they arent really good in the wet heavy snow, they are slower, they are messy especially with an open station machine, and they cost alot more.
And angled plow, weather it be a rear blade or front, is the fastest and most efficient way to get snow off the drive. And if you dont live in the mountains and have steep drops off the sides of the drive, you can get the snow far enough away that you wont have issues come late winter and no where to roll the snow to.
There is a reason you dont see all the contractors running around with blowers doing drives and parking lots.
And the big key around here.....dont get over aggressive about plowing just because you want to play with your new toy. If we get 3" of snow......and its supposed to warm up in 2 or 3 days.....I dont plow. 3" dont cause me any issues. Let it melt off naturally in a few days. Plowing will make a big pile that will take an extended warm up to completely melt off.
IF we get enough snow to warrant plowing, yes it makes big piles. But next time we get some warm weather that will melt some of it, I will spread the piles out to increase its surface area and help it to disappear.
I think everyone's snow removal needs are different, a blower works great for one person, a back blade and FEL works better for the next guy,.
I will agree and disagree
Mine works fine in heavy wet snow, even slush just have to be careful to keep feeding- i think the difference is in the design, clearances and quality of manufacture.
As far as speed, on a road or lane a plow is gonna be faster , until snowbanks or storage become an issue. Residentially though a fair number of contractors are switching to rear pulls as they are the fastest option, you can find a ton of videos on-line where they are doing drives in 60 to 90 seconds, regardless of if there is 1 inch or 10. Too, they aren't screwing up lawns and landscaping because they need to push the snow off. What these guys are doing is selling a superior service (no piles at garage doors, lawn damage, multiple visits per day/storm) for less money than plowers and ending up way more profitable. They are getting more more drives done per machine and retaining more value in the machine over its use. Of course with large scale drifting, low driveway densities, or long drives the math may change, but it is not like the old days of blowers only for big storms. In my case i have used rear blades, front blowers and a rear pull and the rear pull is by far faster over the coarse of the winter and does a better job. Also my tractor is open station and the rear pull is only slightly water than the blade and nothing like the front blower (miserable). I never wanted a plow on a truck as i don't want to have that wear on a truck. Tractors are made for it.
Most of what i know about commercial plowing is from plow site, so take it with a grain of salt but it sure seems like trucks and plows sure break a lot , even though they are simpler.
As to cost a good v plow is not cheep and you really have to compare the cost of the system i.e. 1 ton and plow vs tractor and blower. When you figure out total costs with depreciation, insurance etc i bet they aren't much different.
In my own case i considered a good front blade system but a high quality hydraulic adjustable blade and the outing system was not that much cheaper than my rear pull. And i would have been moving the snow again and again.
Here if you just let it sit it becomes ice and disappears in april.