Snow Equipment Owning/Operating Snow blowing rules of thumb

   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #1  

smfcpacfp

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 21, 2007
Messages
1,314
Location
Sands Township, Marquette Co, Michigan
Tractor
Kubota B3030HSDC
As I contemplate the possible need to get the snowblower out tomorrow, I have developed some snow blowing "rules of thumb" over the years that some of you newbies to snow blowing may want to consider. I have made a post like this each year that I have participated in this forum. I figure that I have moved about 5,600 inches of snow with my three snow blowing rigs over the last 28 years. Feel free to add to my list, I am always looking for new techniques:

RULE 1. Don't put your hand in the moving augers. This is an obvious one. I have occassionaly stuck a broom handle down the chute in the spring with the blower running, but that is about as dumb as I get. I have develped a fondness for my appendages over the years.

RULE 2. Make sure all of the crap that can break your blower and shear pins are out of the way, before the first snow. Put markers out to mark permanent impediments.. When I have broken shear pins, it was always at the beginning of the season when a stray piece of firewood got in the way. Yesterday I went out with the rake and cleaned up any potential impediments.

RULE 3. When you are going to have a major snowstorm, if you can, clean it in increments. Why stress the equipment and yourself? Anyway snowblowing with my rig is fun. If the snow I just blew drifts back into the driveway, I just do it again - twice as much fun with the same snow.

RULE 4. Always clean all of the snow off of your equipment when you are done. I learned this the hard way the second time that I snow blowed. The snow blower was making a **** of a racket when I started it, and then I noticed black smoke coming from the drive belts in the back. So I shut it down and called the dealer. "Didn't you clean out the augers and impeller after you finished? When the snow melts it freezes on the bottom of the impeller assembly such that the impeller won't turn." Duh, nobody told me to do that.

Now I clean off everything, but especially anything which if frozen could make it difficult to start the machine. With my new rig, I wipe all of the water off of the cab that I can get to, clean off the wiper blades and pull them away from the wind shield. Of course, it helps if you have a garage. I also put a piece of wood below the blower so it doesn't freeze to the floor.

RULE 5. Make sure nothing critical is frozen when you start blowing. This is a continuation of what I said in 4. If you have a rig like mine (which shuts off the tractor if no one is in the seat when a PTO device is engaged) put a mirror where you can see that the impeller and augers are spinning freely and the chute rotation is working freely before you have at it.

RULE 6. Never put the blower on the ground on a gravel driveway the first time you use it, unless you enjoy changing sheer bolts. This rule is just for those of us who don't have a paved driveway. I have a gravel driveway, so a good first snowblowing event is a key to no problem for the rest of the winter.

Like everyone else we get a few snow falls early where you know it is going to melt, so this next step is the one I take when we get our first real snowfall. First I run my SUV up-and-down the driveway until the snow is packed down into the gravel before I snow blow for the first time. Then I run the blower but keep it off the ground about an inch. This way the ground will freeze better for future efforts. The next time I run the blower on the ground with the skid plates as low as they go. We don't get much thawing once the snow starts in earnest.

RULE 7. When the snow is deep, take smaller cuts of snow. My first run in the snow is very very slow, usually painfully slow if it dep, or wet. My next cut might be a half of the width of the blower or less. I would rather make more runs and use a little more fuel, then be replacing parts as I did with my old snowblower.

The guy who wrote the Kubota snowblower manual obviously has never used a snow blower before. It says in deep snow take the top layer off and work your way down. To me this is nonsensical. You're going to be driving a tractor in the deep snow and making a general mess. How about just taking a narrower cut of the snowblower potential? Anyway I have been doing this and it has saved many a belt on my old snowblower.

Here is a movie I made of my current snowblowing equipment in action:

YouTube - Kubota B3030 snowblower

Right-front-Kubota-driveway.jpg
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #2  
Rule 8 ) Always have your snowblower installed on your tractor BEFORE it snows. A snowblower tucked into the corner of your barn is ineffective. :(
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #3  
SMFCPACFP.....

Every time you post a picture of your rig I just sit and stare.

Please don't do that.

Thanks.

The big one hits today and tonight here in the NorthEast. 10 plus inches....Up to 18 inches in some areas.

Here we go again.....Another white Christmas. Sweet.:D
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #4  
Thanks for the tips. Much appreciated. This is my first snowblowing attempt with the new Blizzard. First big snow coming down now, looks like six or eight inches so far and counting. Can't wait to start moving it.
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #5  
The big one hits today and tonight here in the NorthEast. 10 plus inches....Up to 18 inches in some areas.

Here we go again.....Another white Christmas. Sweet.:D

And guess who has a 750' gravel driveway AND who's snowblower-carrying tractor had a catastrophic transmission failure Sunday? Uh oh.

I bought the wife a new shovel yesterday...:)

JayC
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #7  
Further to rule #1 stated in the first post, regardless if the tractor is off never put a hand or fingers in a blower to remove foreign object without disengaging the PTO first. Heard a story from a friend a couple weeks ago about a co-worker who lost a couple fingers when the the tension unwound after removing a object from a blower
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #8  
SMFCPACFP.....

Every time you post a picture of your rig I just sit and stare.

Please don't do that.

Thanks.

The big one hits today and tonight here in the NorthEast. 10 plus inches....Up to 18 inches in some areas.

Here we go again.....Another white Christmas. Sweet.:D

I used to sit and stare and try not to drool on anything. Now I have one of my own and am not very patiently waiting for it to SNOW!! They have mentioned flurries in the forecast the last couple of days but so far they have just been teasing me:(.
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #9  
Nice rig and fun video. I use a rear blade on my CUT but used to use a blower on the front of my Craftsman and my biggest rule was: Pay Attention to the Wind! Of course, I didn't have a cab so if I got the wind wrong I was quickly covered in the white stuff.

Thanks for posting, great set up!
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #10  
Rule # 10
Always have spare shear pins (as in 5 or more) and know where they are:eek:
Rule # 11 (Similar to rule #1)
Carry a wooden "scraper" -- hands are not meant to be scrapers to be put down chutes any more than they were meant to be welding clamps:p
Rule # 12
Always know the wind direction -- just like urinating into the wind, blowing snow into the wind usually generates a mess somewhere:rolleyes:

Just some thoughts:D
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #11  
smfcpacfp, is that a RAD International blower on the front? And what size? I've got a 50" sitting at the shop. In S. Florida. I'm ready. :D
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb
  • Thread Starter
#12  
Rule # 10
Always have spare shear pins (as in 5 or more) and know where they are:eek:
Just some thoughts:D

I am problems with the second part of rule #10. I bought $20 worth of the two sizes of shear bolts, but I don't know where I put them!

Anyway I had about 15" of semi wet snow to clear after I packed it down with my 4WD SUV and managed not to break anything. I always have to keep reminding myself to slow down. Judging by what happened today, I have another 15" or so of new stuff to clear tomorrow. Mercifully it was colder today, so it should be less heavy.
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #13  
I bought $20 worth of the two sizes of shear bolts, but I don't know where I put them!
Ain't it the truth -- forget about them long enough and they become bolts holding together something they shouldn't:rolleyes:
I am work at home today dreading going up to the property -- it will be a walk in --blow your way out situation:eek:
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #14  
Still no snow to speak of here:(. There was another 'trace' overnight, not really even worth taking the broom out to clean the sidewalk.
Maybe I'll watch the video again..
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #15  
I too always drive up an down a gravel drive to pack down the snow.
No need to worry aoubt fllying stones then.
>I always try to blow East on a NS drive.
>When very cold I used chemical hand warmers in my mits.
>Wool and cotton...
>No cab and no sides make pr0per dress key
>always clear way back because if it melts and freezes it cant be blown.

glfinamn
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #16  
I would like to add that if you have smallish children like I do, who run around outside with the dogs make sure the kids and pets know to stay up and out of the way. You can't always see them when you're blowing. My kids are trained to stay on the deck with the dogs when I'm blowing snow.

-Justin
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #17  
And guess who has a 750' gravel driveway AND who's snowblower-carrying tractor had a catastrophic transmission failure Sunday? Uh oh.

JayC

You get my sympathy for the Tranny failure. But not for the 750' drive - mine is 2600'.


I used to sit and stare and try not to drool on anything. Now I have one of my own and am not very patiently waiting for it to SNOW!!

After two seasons of record snowfall cleared by tractor with FEL and back blade, I had enough and got both an old f250 with plow, and a blower for the tractor. And if we never get snow that's ok with me. ;) In fact I may have insured we don't now that I have all the right toys. :rolleyes:
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb
  • Thread Starter
#18  
smfcpacfp, is that a RAD International blower on the front? And what size? I've got a 50" sitting at the shop. In S. Florida. I'm ready. :D

It is a RAD blower - 63" You may be ready for snow, but how about the next hurricane? I am ready for that.
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #19  
Wow, nice rig! Nice video too. Thanks for sharing it.
 
   / Snow blowing rules of thumb #20  
smfcpacap: I got a small cloth bag and put all my shear bolts into it and put it in the tool holder of the tractor. It stays there all year, has shear's for the blower, post hole digger, & bush hog. Also a small hammer, drift pin, and open end wrenches that fir the bolts on each pin.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2019 INTERNATIONAL LT625 TANDEM AXLE SLEEPER (A59905)
2019 INTERNATIONAL...
2013 Infiniti G37 Coupe (A59231)
2013 Infiniti G37...
2007 KUBOTA KX121-3 SUPER SERIES EXCAVATOR (A60429)
2007 KUBOTA...
2015 FONTAINE 53 DROP DECK (A55745)
2015 FONTAINE 53...
Commercial Lawn Mower 652R (A56859)
Commercial Lawn...
2008 DOOSAN G25 GENERATOR (A55745)
2008 DOOSAN G25...

Here are some similar links:

 
Top