kco
Veteran Member
As others have stated adding rubber extensions will help greatly with wet slushy snow. This will also increase your fan dia. To 16 1/4 " which will slightly increase your blade tip speed. Now with your fan diameter maximized you can only increase your pto speed which was also mentioned many times. Increasing to 600 rpm at the pto will give you an 11% faster speed at the fan blade tip which you should find as a great improvement. Also you mentioned you were going slow. You should be feeding the blower as much snow as it will handle without the engine bogging down to much. You will eventually learn how fast by looking at the stream of snow and the sound of the engine woking hard. Think someone called it BTW. You need snow to throw snow. There has to be a steady stream of snow coming out the chute. The snow thrown needs more snow just behind it to push it farther, fluid like. Hope suggestions from all will help. Give us some pics to look at.
I also think keeping a good steady flow of snow is important. It is particularly necessary in small (depth) but wet, heavy(weight) snowfalls. Under those conditions the chute will plug up if you don't keep a steady stream going. As already noted, you can regulate the amount of snow with higher ground speed. Also, don't taper the speed if stopping. Either stop quickly or lift the blower so the snow clears the chute and does not have a chance to plug it up. It's the same for starting--don't creep into it. If I forget to do that under heavy, wet conditions of small depth it inevitably ends in having to unplug the chute.
Cold, frozen or dry snow doesn't require the steady stream to stop the plugging, but keeping the chute full does send it further as noted by Amvcane.
A bit off the topic, but still connected...I find a tree planter's spade the most effective tool for clearing a plugged chute. Here are some examples:
Bushpro - Tough Gear for Tough Jobs