If you go to the web sites of the companies who actually manufacturer the roller chain, they strongly advise against doing the hammer peening to retain the pin. They want the center of the pin deformed to displace the pin material out over the plate if you really want a chain with no master link.
The chains are one piece because that is the easy way to make a thousand snow blowers. The chain arrives on the assembly line on the sprockets ready to slip on to the blower..
Depending upon the blower you have the chain could be in two places. If your blower is front mounted and driven from a mid pto turning 2,500 rpm there will be a speed reduction taking place on the back side of the blower to lower the rpm the blower sees to 540 rpm. Usually those chains are a bit enclosed. It it is a completely open chain driving the auger through a sprocket on one side of the auger, I would first be checking what shear bolt you are using on the auger drive sprocket. Some manufacturers have a flat steel plate about 3" wide and the height of the blower deflecting everything away form the chain and sprocket. This would be easy to add.
The normal spring clip joining link should be more than adequate. The rotating speeds are a fraction of those on a motorcycle.
The auger is about 540/2 rpm or less i.e. 270 rpm.
A motorcycle with 120/70/17 tire with a rolling circumference of 74" will rotate 856 rpm at 60 mph and we all know they go much faster. The rear sprocket is rotating the same speed as the wheel is turning.
Your blower will have two shear bolts. One for the auger and one on the pto or fan.
Dave
M7040