Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade

   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #51  
That does look like an interesting solution. My blade did come with a gauge wheel, but I took it off. It's only one wheel and it's not directly behind the blade like you have, but maybe I should try it in the snow? Trouble is I only have two rear remotes and would need to install a diverter.
A lot of folks just use manually set gauge wheels. If they are positioned correctly in relation to the blade, once you find a good spot, they don't tend to need to be adjusted very often.
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #52  
A lot of folks just use manually set gauge wheels. If they are positioned correctly in relation to the blade, once you find a good spot, they don't tend to need to be adjusted very often.
That is what I do. I just lower the blade while I'm still in the garage on the concrete and set the wheels so I have 1 1/2" or so, then go plow.

Gauge wheels are also good for grading the gravel, you can just lower the outside wheel so the blade digs in and keep the inner side up so it moves the gravel toward the center of the drive.

One other note about plowing snow off gravel - if you want to keep the gravel out of your grass (and you have a wide enough drive) don't plow all the way to the edge. I try to leave about a foot on each side so any gravel that gets picked up by the blade (and there will ALWAYS be some) stays on the drive.

Obviously if you have huge amounts of snow this won't work because you have to push it farther back. But where I live, we don't often get more than 6" or 8".
 
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   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #53  
We had our first big dump of the season. About 12" over 24 hours and I plowed twice.

The tractor with rear chains did great, though it wasn't very icy. No issues on the steep hill.

But I don't think the ground around here freezes enough to float the rear blade. Even with my oversized skid shoes, it just wanted to sink into the soft ground. I ended up having to use the 3pt position control lever to set the blade height. It achieved a good result, but I had to adjust it a lot, given my hilly terrain. It took me 4 hours to plow about 2 miles. But that included dealing with a downed tree. I'm sure with a bit more practice I could get it done in under 3 hours or less. I'm thinking about covering the blade with plastic pipe so I can maybe use the float that way?View attachment 1931372
Just remove the worthless skidshoes and reverse the blade around so the cutting edge is facing the rear. Then float the blade. The weight of the blade will remove the snow while the rear facing cutting edge will glide over the gravel without disturbing it. Been doing this since 2000. You don’t need skidshoes or gauge wheels.
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade
  • Thread Starter
#54  
Just remove the worthless skidshoes and reverse the blade around so the cutting edge is facing the rear. Then float the blade. The weight of the blade will remove the snow while the rear facing cutting edge will glide over the gravel without disturbing it. Been doing this since 2000. You don’t need skidshoes or gauge wheels.

I did try that, but my blade has a bunch of re-reinforcements and a pivot bearing box on the rear, so it just collects snow, even though I have the blade at an angle.
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #55  
I did try that, but my blade has a bunch of re-reinforcements and a pivot bearing box on the rear, so it just collects snow, even though I have the blade at an angle.
Hmm. I’ve never used a blade where reversing doesn’t work well for this purpose. Any rear blade is going to collect snow to some extent. But it will clear the road down to where there’s just a few inches on the road.
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #56  
If you can't use tire chains maybe something like
this would work?? amazon

1733272145583.png


willy
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #57  
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #58  
pickup tire chains are a lot less that chains for a tractor
so why not get two sets of truck tire chains and put them
to gether on a tractor tire??? Guys would purchase a 3/4
ton pickup and they had a 1/2 ton they traded with 15 inch
tires and the 3/4 had 16 inch they would just add some more
chain to fit. I have a set of chains that fit a 975x16.5 tire haven't tried to see if they will fit out tractor and a set of VW
chains I'll just add more chain to fit. If I remember correctly
the Fleet Farm stores in Fond du Lac WI sold the chain so you
could add chain and they carried the links to hook them to
gether

willy
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #59  
Just remove the worthless skidshoes and reverse the blade around so the cutting edge is facing the rear. Then float the blade. The weight of the blade will remove the snow while the rear facing cutting edge will glide over the gravel without disturbing it. Been doing this since 2000. You don’t need skidshoes or gauge wheels.
I would like to try this, but my goofy Frontier blade has less adjustment holes on the back side than on the front. So I can't get enough angle to push snow off effectively with it facing backwards.

I could drill a couple more holes, but it's a 1/2" plate and I just don't want it bad enough to go to the trouble. I have no idea why they built it that way. I've never seen a rear blade with less adjusting holes when facing forward than backwards.
 
   / Snow chains for plowing with a rear blade #60  
Maybe not on 2 mile gravel driveways, but a great tool for the toolbox would be a set of Edge Tamer bucket skid shoes. They are great on gravel.
 
 

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