SmallChange
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2019
- Messages
- 738
- Tractor
- New Holland WM25 with 200LC front end loader, filled R4 tires 43X16.00-20 and 25X8.50-14 (had a Kubota B6200D with dozer and R1 tires)
I have a FEL bucket with a straight edge, and I use it to clear snow (my driveway has a big cul-de-sac with walls and I have to carry snow out through a narrow neck).
But when I finally got it paved with asphalt a few years ago, I worried about the steel edge damaging it, so I bought a bolt-on urethane edge. It's at least a couple inches tall. For the two snows we recently had (only around 3 inches deep), this edge was tall enough to pile snow up in front of the bucket rather than in the bucket, some of the time. At a couple points I actually dismounted and shoveled the pile into the bucket, or kicked it in, feeling foolish.
And now that I'm paying attention to other people clearing paved driveways and roads, I have not not seen a single urethane bucket edge.
So, this was a dumb choice, wasn't it?
I do see some plow blades have adjustable skids behind them. And I do own bolt-on bucket edge tamers, short little sled runners that wrap around the edge (without the urethane). I've seen some people using CUTs with FEL buckets clearing snow on pavement, and they didn't have edge tamers. For that matter, the years before paving when I didn't have the urethane, I was getting a few feet of the edge of the paved road without edge tamers.
What's the smart approach? Bare bucket? Add edge tamers? Or keep using the urethane?
Thanks!!
But when I finally got it paved with asphalt a few years ago, I worried about the steel edge damaging it, so I bought a bolt-on urethane edge. It's at least a couple inches tall. For the two snows we recently had (only around 3 inches deep), this edge was tall enough to pile snow up in front of the bucket rather than in the bucket, some of the time. At a couple points I actually dismounted and shoveled the pile into the bucket, or kicked it in, feeling foolish.
And now that I'm paying attention to other people clearing paved driveways and roads, I have not not seen a single urethane bucket edge.
So, this was a dumb choice, wasn't it?
I do see some plow blades have adjustable skids behind them. And I do own bolt-on bucket edge tamers, short little sled runners that wrap around the edge (without the urethane). I've seen some people using CUTs with FEL buckets clearing snow on pavement, and they didn't have edge tamers. For that matter, the years before paving when I didn't have the urethane, I was getting a few feet of the edge of the paved road without edge tamers.
What's the smart approach? Bare bucket? Add edge tamers? Or keep using the urethane?
Thanks!!