</font><font color="blue" class="small">( RWB,
Depending on how deep and heavy the snow is, you might find that lots of rear weight will allow the front end of the tractor to raise off the ground while the blade is in float.
I am not a winter person, but I'm looking forward to moving some snow this year. Using the FEL (as I have in years past) is very slow and tedious. This spring I got a front blade and expect to clear the roadway much faster...a mini-snowplow...YES!!
I could be way off on this, but I think the place (for me) to start is with no rear ballast and hope for no wheelies. Then, add some weight if traction is a problem... /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
OkieG
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Sounds good to me. You'll love the front plow! As long as you have a spring trip on it in case you hit something under the snow, don't be afraid to move right along. Inertia helps when plowing, I've found.
And yes, no reason to add rear weight unless you find you need it. Keep in mind, though, that the front blade itself weights quite a bit, and that you might want enough rear weight to at least offset that.
I keep finding myself recommending that people experiment with weight until they find the sweet spot. What I did was use a rear dirt scoop, and a bunch of those sand tubes people use in the back of trucks or cars. I kept adding them until I hit the ideal... given my tractor, my tires, my driveway, and so on.
I may still find that it needs fine-tuning, if the ice is different this year than the last couple, etc.
Wheelies look cool, but aren't effective for moving snow in my limited experience! /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
Bob