Bob_Young
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2002
- Messages
- 1,244
- Location
- North of the Fingerlakes - NY
- Tractor
- Ford 4000; Ford 2000(both 3cyl.);JD40; 2004 Kubota L4300; 2006 Kubota B7610; new 2007 Kubota MX5000
I move most of my snow with a B7610 using a Woods RB60 rear blade. Before that I used an RB84 behind my L4300. I'm in upstate NY and get a lot of snow, but nothing like the Tug Hill gang.
Like Mike Kanzer said, on soft surfaces, you gotta move the snow with the blade's convex side moving forward. Otherwise it'll dig in. Once the ground freezes hard, it's not a big issue. On pavement, concave forward seems to work fine. It's nice to have a blade that can be turned around 180 degrees when needed. This allows you to push or pull with either side foreward.
Also, look for a blade that'll let you adjust and float blade tilt. This lets the blade follow surface variations between where the tractor is sitting and where the blade is contacting. The Woods RB60 and RB84 both allow this and it makes a big difference. Most of the smaller and cheaper blades do not. The smallest Woods blades made for the BX do not, as I recall.
Your idea about setting the blade a little above the surface never worked for me. My driveways are too uneven. If the front wheels went over a bump, the blade would go down in response and often dig in. Even with the L4300's position control, it didn't work well; with the 7610's quarter-inching, it's harder yet. If your driveway has no bumps or dips, you may get away with it.
I used to have a lawn tractor with a snow blower. Got tired of stumbling over the blower in the garage 7 months out of the year. Everytime I think about getting a 3PH blower, I remember how that old one used to take up space. Glad it's gone.
Looking backward can be a pain if the neck is bothering you. I have to do it anyway as I'm on a busy highway and have to check for traffic alot. Rear blade or not, I'm always looking over my shoulder for traffic.
FWIW
Bob
Like Mike Kanzer said, on soft surfaces, you gotta move the snow with the blade's convex side moving forward. Otherwise it'll dig in. Once the ground freezes hard, it's not a big issue. On pavement, concave forward seems to work fine. It's nice to have a blade that can be turned around 180 degrees when needed. This allows you to push or pull with either side foreward.
Also, look for a blade that'll let you adjust and float blade tilt. This lets the blade follow surface variations between where the tractor is sitting and where the blade is contacting. The Woods RB60 and RB84 both allow this and it makes a big difference. Most of the smaller and cheaper blades do not. The smallest Woods blades made for the BX do not, as I recall.
Your idea about setting the blade a little above the surface never worked for me. My driveways are too uneven. If the front wheels went over a bump, the blade would go down in response and often dig in. Even with the L4300's position control, it didn't work well; with the 7610's quarter-inching, it's harder yet. If your driveway has no bumps or dips, you may get away with it.
I used to have a lawn tractor with a snow blower. Got tired of stumbling over the blower in the garage 7 months out of the year. Everytime I think about getting a 3PH blower, I remember how that old one used to take up space. Glad it's gone.
Looking backward can be a pain if the neck is bothering you. I have to do it anyway as I'm on a busy highway and have to check for traffic alot. Rear blade or not, I'm always looking over my shoulder for traffic.
FWIW
Bob
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