KubotainNH
Veteran Member
Ouch. Angle grinder with a cutoff wheel (or 2) will make quick work of it. That's unless you want to weld it back together like someone else mention.
One should pull all shear bolts and be sure the mechanism is not rusted together.
Some of my stuff has a grease fitting and others will rust up if not sheared on a regular basis.
Checking the shear connections is part of my fall start up or done in the spring on mowing equipment.
I suspect this is what happens when you have a poorly designed snowblower with out shear bolt protection on the impeller. I looks very similar to my 59" front mount blower on my JD 3720. I think the fact that you have a key there means the bolt is meant for attachment, not as a shear bolt. I have not seen a shaft with a shear bolt that also had a key, may be possible but I've never seen it.
Al
i agree. i'm working on converting a 359 blower to a 59 blower (gear swap in main gear case), and from what i can tell, the only shear bolts are on the augers. from the impeller back to mid pto, everything is either splined or keyed and bolted. seems to me to be a poor design in that a major impeller jam is going to break something in the main gear box or the tractor pto. in a sense, you got off easy when that part broke?