8" ain't trivial if ya ain't used to it!!!
Problem is, you won't get this kind of snow frequent enough to really get used to it
I don't think I would consider that a "problem"
8" ain't trivial if ya ain't used to it!!!
Problem is, you won't get this kind of snow frequent enough to really get used to it
That's 30-40 years of experience using older equipment...Yesterday late afternoon I was plowing snow with my shiny B2601 and saw an ancient tractor coming down our subdivision road at me. It was a JD that looked like 1930s vintage, with a thin old rear blade. Geezer at the wheel looked like he was out of the 1930s too. Am surely exaggerating on tractor but have just never seen a JD that old still operating. 2WD, huge rear wheels. He proceeded to blade snow off a neighbor's long drive I'd just plowed. The rig really worked. He did slide a bit going uphill but recovered.
I was using my blade for the second time, so cut myself some slack. But had to admit he may have had the superior rig for our 8" snowfall. His tractor wouldn't fit my main use, however—FEL work. So there was some comfort in that!
Thank you for the tip!I'd recommend some thing like this -- pointed edges
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I have asphalt. Before I got my tractor my neighbor plowed my drive with a Kubota M90 something ... he did it first year with a blade and last year with a pusher. He was in and out with the pusher so less time also the blade left marks on my asphalt where it dug in a few places.Bob, what is the advantage of a pusher over a front blade?
Get a pair of these:
I've been using them for the last couple winters and they're considerable help
I have a pretty gimpy leg, so I need to be really careful when it's slick. With me, the trax aren't a cure-all, but they do lower the risk of falling
I always remove mine when:I just got back inside & took off my Yaktrax-equipped outdoor boots.
Everyone that I know uses Yaktrax. They are a necessary part of winter - especially when icy - or when snow covers ice. We need them to walk to the tractor....
If they work for you get a spare; they are often sold out on popular sizes.
Downside is they are hazardous and hard on polished floors. Home Depot can be scary in Yaktraks
rScotty
Later I talked to the woman he and I were digging out. She said he'd said, as she recalled, he'd said it was a 1950s tractor that had belonged to his father.That's 30-40 years of experience using older equipment...