blade on lawn tractor

   / blade on lawn tractor #11  
i have a dozerblade i made which i put on my simplicity 3416h tractor(16hp)
(abit bigger than a lawntractor or garden tractor) even with turf tires it pushes a lot of dirt so depending on the hp and the pitch of the road to plow you could probly do it if you chained up , filled ur tires and put a counter weight on light snow could probly pushed with a lawn tractor with the blade angled quite sharp.
 
   / blade on lawn tractor #12  
brettliddicoat said:
i was wondering what people think of putting a blade on a lawn tractor i am not shure if it would do a lot of good it is a craftsman with 18.5 hp engine 2 wheel drive as most lawn tractors are just wondering before i waste a bunch of money


thanks guys and gals

I built my own small tractor snow and dirt pusher from a old 124 Cub Cadet. I bought it as a basket case with a dozer blade running, but smoking (badly) for $200. Stripping, sandblasting, repainting to original colors then took the original 12 HP K-241 Engine, bored it .030 over, decked the top of the block, and to .050 off the cylinder head. I used the cam shaft, lifters and carburetor from a K-341 16HP engine. (24HP @ 3600RPM) The 16.5 X 12 Ag tread tires are filled with RV Antifreeze which I leave in year around, with a single 42 pound suitcase weight on the rear. With dual chrome straight stacks it is a lot of fun pushing snow around at 6AM in my subdivision. Except for the engine overhaul kit, every thing else on the tractor, including the Ford 8N metal seat was purchased used.

And if it breaks, I'll just put it back together again. My CC 2042 is reserved for hauling my yard trailer and mowing.
 
   / blade on lawn tractor
  • Thread Starter
#13  
we now have a cub lt1042 i purchased the 46 inch blade for it a set of chains and filled the rear tires with 5 gal of window wash in each tire it does a prety good job the only mods ive done is replace the cheap small hair pins with decent ones and thats been it the only thing i dont like is the lack of ground clerance with the plow or bracket on theres only like 3 in of ground clerance and also how you cant push it in very tall piles because there isnt enough lift it only lifts like 6 in off the ground but hey for bein a lawn tractor its not bad at alll plus it was a grand cheaper than the blower
 
   / blade on lawn tractor #14  
I now have the same setup, but have put a pair of cast iron caster wheels on the bottom edge of the blade giving me a constant 1/2 inch of clearance, and no longer have to lift the blade in 90% of the turns.

NOW IF I ONLY HAD SNOW! Just joking, I'm in Indiana and it was 67 degrees today (Dec 27th). Started raining about 4PM, and have 2 inches of rain expected by Sunday AM
 
   / blade on lawn tractor #15  
I now have the same setup, but have put a pair of cast iron caster wheels on the bottom edge of the blade giving me a constant 1/2 inch of clearance, and no longer have to lift the blade in 90% of the turns.

NOW IF I ONLY HAD SNOW! Just joking, I'm in Indiana and it was 67 degrees today (Dec 27th). Started raining about 4PM, and have 2 inches of rain expected by Sunday AM
about 75 here today.
 
   / blade on lawn tractor #16  
This latest snow we had in Indiana was to much for my 22hp Kohler twin power Cub Cadet, hydro. So, I pushed my REAL Cub out, a 1966 124 with a slightly modified K-310 dyno tested to 28 hp. NO PROBLEM!

My drive is 28 ft wide, 75 long with concrete curbs and #10 (dime size) white rock. In the past I have had trouble pushing the rock up and having to wait until spring to put it back. This year I went the local farm store and bought a pair of cast iron 4" caster wheels, and put them on the snowplow in place of the "pads" that was there. I set them so they held the plow off the driveway 1 inch. It worked great. The sun melted the less than one inch in a couple hours.


I have a 2003 Craftsman GT5000. GT is supposed to be a heavier duty Garden Tractor. 25 HP Kohler with hydro drive. They sell 2 blades, or they did back then. I bought the heavy duty one.

I have chains but never got wheel weights. Everytime I needed them they were sold out. When there's no snow I forget about getting them. I have a tube of sand strapped on the back. I've plowed more snow so far this year than any other year I've been here. Yesterday I finally got wheel weights.

My gravel drive is over 200 feet. The only problem I've had was low traction sometimes but that is taken care of now. As long as you have chains and weights I see no problem plowing snow.

A couple years ago I let it get deep over the weekend because I didn't feel like plowing. It froze over on the top. It was like ice. Without wheel weights I couldn't get enough traction to break the solid top and push the deeper snow. I lifted the blade and plowed the top off then lowered it and finished it off. Took twice as long but I got it cleared. I don't know if the weights would have made a difference or not.
 
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