Let me tell you a little bit about my situation. I live on the southern shore of Lake Superior. We get 10 to 30 feet of snow each year, with 95% of that being
lake effect snow. I normally have to snow blow 20 to 25 times a year. I have a driveway that, all told is about 600 feet long and 20 feet wide. I have been moving the snow around since 1978. Although many areas have had little or no snow this year, we are about 20% below average and I have ran my blower nine times this winter. Right now we have about 18 inches of very hardpacked snow on the ground and it is 17ー.
It appears to me that you have been getting some bad advice from some well-meaning tractor owners.
Fallacy one,
If you live in big snow country you need a big tractor. I am a guy who likes big powerful things. In the summertime, I drive a 520 hp Corvette. When they delivered my
B3030 tractor and snowblower my comment to my wife was, "I thought it was bigger than that", and I almost went back to the dealer and got a bigger tractor, because money wasn't really an issue for me. Even now when I see a bigger Kubota tractor, I sort of wish I would've bought it. The fact is you don't need a big tractor when you live in big snow country. My neighbor does quite well with his John Deere lawn tractor. When I look at his driveway, it looks great.
What happens when you get a really big snow and you don't have a gigantic tractor? The answer is you take your time, you go a little slower, you take smaller cuts with your blower, maybe only half the width of the blower or one third the width of the blower. Instead of snow blowing my driveway in 40 min., maybe it takes me 55 min. A couple of years ago we had a snow event that lasted for 4 1/2 days nonstop. When you have snow like that, you don't wait until the snow event is over and you are buried in drifts that are higher than your tractor, instead you go out and snow blow every few hours. What are the drawbacks in having a snowblower that is bigger then what you need: everything costs more, it is less maneuverable, and more and taller space is needed for storage.
A heated cab makes snowblowing a pleasurable experience. I love to go out and blow snow, especially at night and when it is very stormy outside. The air-conditioned cab in the summertime makes things cooler, and keeps bugs and pollen out. It is difficult to maneuver a cabbed tractor through the woods, but it can be done.
If I were you I would go for that
B2920 that you planned to acquire originally, or the
B3030 HSDC.
If you want to see
B3030 HSDC looks like blowing snow, check out my YouTube video below.
Kubota B3030 HSDC snowblowing Jan 2012 (HD) - YouTube