Anonymous Poster
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
- Messages
- 29,678
I have had quite a few years experience with tractor mounted snowblowers both single and two stage and have fought through just about every kind of scenerio. I have found that most of the time when a blower would plug up on me it was in wet snow 3" or less due to not enough snow being fed into the blower to maintain a steady velocity through the discharge chute. This became even worse under some conditions when the snow wanted to push ahead of the blower rather then feed in. The little loose bits going through don't move very fast and stick on to each other and eventually form a plug. What I do to counter this is to use my rear blade to windrow the snow into a pile in the center of my drive and then eat the pile with the blower which gives it a good steady feed rate. Also air temperatures just above freezing can aggrivate the problem. A lot of times I'll check the forcast after a wet snowfall and if it looks like it might freeze up good overnight I'll just wait til the next day to go at it. Frozen wet or granular snow flys through the blower really well. Hope these suggestions help.