simonmeridew
Silver Member
Hi Got:
My approach for plowing your driveway/road would be to start pushing with the bucket as far as you can get or until it bogs down with snow piled in front of the bucket. Then carefully bucket the accumulated snow to the side...probably 5 bucketfuls or so, then start back down the drive again until it bogs etc. When you get to the bottom start back up the hill going forward, and when you get to the top, turn around again and start down with the bucket by moving over a few feet left or right and push again.
That's this year.
Next year, three things: put a snow fence on the prevailing side of the drive in the areas that drift the worst a/o plant short evergreen trees as a wind break for the future. two: put some whips every 15 feet or so especially where the drive curves to mark where the drive is. three: get a snow plow mounted on the front of your bucket, either with a quick-connect or other arrangement, to help "cast" the snow to the side. It'll be spring loaded so that if you hit a frozen piece or gravel or some other obstruction the blade will pivot and avoid shock-damaging the loader hydraulics/cylinders etc. From the looks of your excellent pics you need a serious snow plow setup and a simple upgrade from rear chains to front/rear chains is not going to be enough. That pic looks like an 8 or 10 hour chore to clear the snow.
I bought Norwegian boron steel spike chains for the rears of my L4400 and traction is no longer a problem. We get snow 2 or 3 times a winter like in your pic ourselves plus I log with my winch so I want traction.
simonmeridew
My approach for plowing your driveway/road would be to start pushing with the bucket as far as you can get or until it bogs down with snow piled in front of the bucket. Then carefully bucket the accumulated snow to the side...probably 5 bucketfuls or so, then start back down the drive again until it bogs etc. When you get to the bottom start back up the hill going forward, and when you get to the top, turn around again and start down with the bucket by moving over a few feet left or right and push again.
That's this year.
Next year, three things: put a snow fence on the prevailing side of the drive in the areas that drift the worst a/o plant short evergreen trees as a wind break for the future. two: put some whips every 15 feet or so especially where the drive curves to mark where the drive is. three: get a snow plow mounted on the front of your bucket, either with a quick-connect or other arrangement, to help "cast" the snow to the side. It'll be spring loaded so that if you hit a frozen piece or gravel or some other obstruction the blade will pivot and avoid shock-damaging the loader hydraulics/cylinders etc. From the looks of your excellent pics you need a serious snow plow setup and a simple upgrade from rear chains to front/rear chains is not going to be enough. That pic looks like an 8 or 10 hour chore to clear the snow.
I bought Norwegian boron steel spike chains for the rears of my L4400 and traction is no longer a problem. We get snow 2 or 3 times a winter like in your pic ourselves plus I log with my winch so I want traction.
simonmeridew