One complaint I have withe using a 3ph snowblower is that in some weather conditions ice starts building up in the blower chute between the fixed snowblower base and the chute itself. Basically its two concentric steel pipes and no bearing surface to slide on. Its just paint to paint or steel to steel. Theres a little bit of melting happening in between and eventually ice builds up enough to jamb the chute rotator.
My snowblowers have always been the manual chute turner type using a steel cable wrapped around the chute base to turn it. Not a very durable design. Eventually I cant hand crank them after using it a while.
I rebuilt an old snowblower and modified the hand crank to be operated by a hydraulic motor. I had to add this after installing a cab on my tractor. The problem now is I have lots of torque - enough to pull the chute off or break the steel rotator cables after the chute rotator ices up.
Ive tried oils, spray grease, dry lube...they all fail after a while. I then tried cutting up one of my kids crazy carpets (a thin plastic sheet with handles kids can use as a taboggan) and inserted it in between. It works great until the back and forth action causes the plastic to ride up and out of the joint until the friction from the blowing snow throws it out of the machine.
My thinking is if I could find some thin self adhesive UHMW plastic sheet somewhere it might solve my problems. UHMW is an excellent material used as plastic bearings. Its very slippery and takes a lot of abuse. On amazon I found this 1 inch wide tape
https://www.amazon.ca/CS-Hyde-Polyethylene-Rubber-Adhesive/dp/B000REGUE4
I pulled the chute, cleaned it well, and spiral wrapped the UHMW tape around the impeller exit. The tape seems very sticky and had good adhesion to the painted steel even though it was only several degrees above freezing in my barn. I re-mounted the chute and so far so good. Hopefully this tape lasts at least a season.
Sorry no pictures yet. I didnt bring my phone with me to take photos when I did this. We had an unexpected snow dump of 6 inches yesterday and I had to do some juggling to get the snowblower out of storage and the driveway cleared before work.
My snowblowers have always been the manual chute turner type using a steel cable wrapped around the chute base to turn it. Not a very durable design. Eventually I cant hand crank them after using it a while.
I rebuilt an old snowblower and modified the hand crank to be operated by a hydraulic motor. I had to add this after installing a cab on my tractor. The problem now is I have lots of torque - enough to pull the chute off or break the steel rotator cables after the chute rotator ices up.
Ive tried oils, spray grease, dry lube...they all fail after a while. I then tried cutting up one of my kids crazy carpets (a thin plastic sheet with handles kids can use as a taboggan) and inserted it in between. It works great until the back and forth action causes the plastic to ride up and out of the joint until the friction from the blowing snow throws it out of the machine.
My thinking is if I could find some thin self adhesive UHMW plastic sheet somewhere it might solve my problems. UHMW is an excellent material used as plastic bearings. Its very slippery and takes a lot of abuse. On amazon I found this 1 inch wide tape
https://www.amazon.ca/CS-Hyde-Polyethylene-Rubber-Adhesive/dp/B000REGUE4
I pulled the chute, cleaned it well, and spiral wrapped the UHMW tape around the impeller exit. The tape seems very sticky and had good adhesion to the painted steel even though it was only several degrees above freezing in my barn. I re-mounted the chute and so far so good. Hopefully this tape lasts at least a season.
Sorry no pictures yet. I didnt bring my phone with me to take photos when I did this. We had an unexpected snow dump of 6 inches yesterday and I had to do some juggling to get the snowblower out of storage and the driveway cleared before work.
