Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019

   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #131  
Just leave it on the whole time you are blowing snow. No need to stress the PTO clutch by turning it off and back on.
That's what I do with the tiller, pretty sure I didn't bother shutting the blower down on the old tractor unless I was leaving a driveway. Generally your PTO shaft will be straighter when lifted. Combine that with no load & it's less stress & wear than when blowing. The only risk is running I to something, which would likely break things anyway.
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #132  
Well I finally got to use my new blower and it works as advertised. It is much easier to drive down going forward. You do have to go slower but the snow is gone and you don't have to move it a couple of times
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #133  
Well I finally got to use my new blower and it works as advertised. It is much easier to drive down going forward. You do have to go slower but the snow is gone and you don't have to move it a couple of times

I hope you keep giving us updates as you use it, and perhaps a video. After you make your first pass, do you overlap a bit, and can you then go a bit faster? I see it has a 5 blade fan. How well/far does it blow? Which model did you buy?
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #134  
Wrong discussion
 
Last edited:
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #135  
Wrong discussion
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #136  
They first time I had a wet 18 inch's of snow so it's was slow but almost full pass's the next was 5ish and went almost as fast as the plow
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #137  
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It better to turn off the Power Take Off and then restart the Power Take Off at near idle speed as you will be backing up slowly at a much slower engine speed and you need to concentrate on controlling the tractor then reengaging the Power Take Off before making the second pass.

You also need to tilt the spout control downward to reduce the snow spray that you are creating with it as well.
You do not have to have it fully upright as the snow spray can and will become so great that you will have difficulty
seeing everything and if the wind changes you may be blinded while driving forward and that is not something
you want to have happen.

You can safely leave the spout control at the horizontal position while working if there is very little wind blowing as you
are not trying to stack the blown snow above the tractor height. if there is a high wind blowing you simply lower the
spout to either side below the horizontal position and just continue to clear the snow.

The more time you spend in the seat with the snow blower the more familiar you will become with how to operate it and avoid
any issues with operating the tractor as your use of the spout control will become second nature to keep the snow spray volume
at a bare minimum.

Once you have the chute and spout control set you do not have to worry about looking back constantly either as it will be very
distracting while you are clearing snow and you will have less time to react if you start sliding.

When you have wet heavy snow at times in the winter and in the early spring you will need to slow down raise the spout above horizontal and just
crawl along to cast the snow to either side to get rid of it. Heavy wet snow is an energy hog for a 2 stage snow blower of any type due to the gear reduction and open auger design of a 2 stage snow blower.

In heavy, wet snow I find keeping the chute as full as possible is effective to prevent plugging. It keeps a solid column of snow moving in the full diameter of the chute and the fan keeps pushing the column from the bottom. If I need to slow down to turn I lift the blower to completely clear it. Then, when starting the next run lower it and move at a speed to keep the blower busy. Any time I have plugged the chute it seems to be from not keeping the blower busy enough.
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019
  • Thread Starter
#138  
We are getting our 3rd snow event of the season tomorrow, should be 3"-6". I have been very disappointed with the amount of snow that is left behind by the Meteor 78" blower. Can't understand why the brand new tyvar cutting edge doesn't scrape good at all. The unit was installed by dealer on the tractor and appears to be done correctly. It sits perfectly level with the ground.

The only thing I can think of us that since the tires obviously pack down the snow creating tire tracks, the cutting edge has no choice but to be up however much the section packed down by the tires is. If the tire pack is a quarter inch, then that becomes the lowest point the cutting edge can go. Even though there is several feet of unpacked snow in between the tire marks, the edge cant get it because its now riding on two raised sections created by the tires. So the whole unit glides along hovering above the clean asphalt that it should be scraping against. This sucks. IMG_20191203_093300.jpgIMG_20191203_101645.jpgIMG_20191211_102235.jpgIMG_20191211_102237.jpg
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019 #139  
Can't you adjust the shoes up a bit?

With that said though, what your pictures are showing looks fine to me.
 
   / Rear Inverted Snowblowers 2019
  • Thread Starter
#140  
I don't know if these shoes can be adjusted. I was wondering if maybe I took the shoes off and just left the long cutting edge on the bottom, maybe that would work better. Perhaps the side shoes are causing the unit to ride up on the packed snow?
IMG_20191204_120357.jpgIMG_20191204_120401.jpgIMG_20191204_120453.jpg
 

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