PILOON
Super Star Member
Re pull type blowers.
As far as I know they were specifically designed with suburban door to door snow contractors in mind.
In suburbs like Montreal a contractor will have 20 clients on a street with one every 200 feet. He backs his 100 hp tractor up flush to the garage door, drops it drives out to next door (200 ft)
drops the blower again and drives out again etc etc.
About 5 mins per driveway.
But then the contractor assigns 200 drives per driver and gets $300 per season. A double wide drive is $450.(2 passes) Many also only lease the tractors for the winter season.
That suburban client does not to even shovel his garage door for 5 mins, he leaves for work and grabs a Tim Horten coffee on the way.
(For many an 8 hour workday is 10 - 11 hours when you include commute time.)
The pull blower is marginally more $ than the regular rear units as most components are same with few extra parts.
Front blowers generally need to turn faster (most match engine RPM) and want many different adapters (and gear box ) compared to rear that are simply class 1,2 or 3.
Notice than on CUTS many front blowers use components that are shared with walk behind blowers and hence not as heavy duty as will be found in pull behind units.
The whole 'pull blower' concept started off as a couple of handy type contractors welding up a home made pull type unit and eating up the competition thus creating demand for the type.
Then came a pivoted drop blade to get that last shovel full of snow at the garage door base.
Living in Montreal area I am very familiar with most blower concepts and major manufacturers as the key players are pretty well all within 75 miles of here and typically we generally enjoy (?) 200+ inches of snow per season with many being major events. (10-30")
Hey we even have a snow tire law. Fines are your reward and all season tires not allowed.
Hiway snow clearing is another interesting concept in itself.
As far as I know they were specifically designed with suburban door to door snow contractors in mind.
In suburbs like Montreal a contractor will have 20 clients on a street with one every 200 feet. He backs his 100 hp tractor up flush to the garage door, drops it drives out to next door (200 ft)
drops the blower again and drives out again etc etc.
About 5 mins per driveway.
But then the contractor assigns 200 drives per driver and gets $300 per season. A double wide drive is $450.(2 passes) Many also only lease the tractors for the winter season.
That suburban client does not to even shovel his garage door for 5 mins, he leaves for work and grabs a Tim Horten coffee on the way.
(For many an 8 hour workday is 10 - 11 hours when you include commute time.)
The pull blower is marginally more $ than the regular rear units as most components are same with few extra parts.
Front blowers generally need to turn faster (most match engine RPM) and want many different adapters (and gear box ) compared to rear that are simply class 1,2 or 3.
Notice than on CUTS many front blowers use components that are shared with walk behind blowers and hence not as heavy duty as will be found in pull behind units.
The whole 'pull blower' concept started off as a couple of handy type contractors welding up a home made pull type unit and eating up the competition thus creating demand for the type.
Then came a pivoted drop blade to get that last shovel full of snow at the garage door base.
Living in Montreal area I am very familiar with most blower concepts and major manufacturers as the key players are pretty well all within 75 miles of here and typically we generally enjoy (?) 200+ inches of snow per season with many being major events. (10-30")
Hey we even have a snow tire law. Fines are your reward and all season tires not allowed.
Hiway snow clearing is another interesting concept in itself.