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BobSmith


Location: Ontario Canada, snowbelt off Georgian Bay
Joined: Nov 16, 2005
Points: 30

End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Original Message   Nov 21, 2005 9:26 am
I am purchasing an Ariens 7524 (w/7.5 HP OHV)and am wondering about those with smaller machines and EOD issues. I live in the snowbelt north of Toronto. I have very limited storage space (along w/wife who felt most confident when handling the 7524 vs. the larger machines) and, after much consideration, the 7524 was the right machine. My only real concern is EOD as we can get large, over 1 foot piles deposited there. Anyone else with this machine, the other small Ariens, or other smaller machines, what is your experience with EOD? Thanks very much.
Replies: 6 - 12 of 12Next page of topicsPreviousAllView as Outline
jogo


Location: Westchester N.Y.
Joined: Sep 8, 2003
Points: 463

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #6   Nov 22, 2005 9:09 pm
A little off topic here...BobSmith...do you ever go to drippy's? Ther is a bobsmith there.

Red Max EB78001 blower
Echo PB1000 blower
Sears ? blower
Sears 16" chainsaw
John Deere STX38
Murray 21" push mower
Echo SRM1501 weed wacker
Excell/Honda pressure washer
Ariens 11528
BobSmith


Location: Ontario Canada, snowbelt off Georgian Bay
Joined: Nov 16, 2005
Points: 30

Re: Deivered Ariens 7524, First impressions
Reply #7   Nov 24, 2005 1:41 pm
Guys, thanks for all of the replies. Jogo-Never heard of drippys-is it in Ontario?

I received delivery of my Ariens 7524 this morning. This is my first snowblower. I never operated one until this morning. I was actually impressed by the ease of operation and startup. The snowblower guy gave me a thorough demo and I was set. I had about 1-2 inches on the the ground plus 6-8 inches of (fresh) EOD plow crud at the end of the driveway and it handled it all with ease. It also handled the rest of the driveway with ease. My driveway is about 15 feet wide and about 60 feet long with a couple of weird spaces that I already see I'll have to get creative as far as handling the blowing geometry. I noticed that when you hit a deeper patch of snow, it tends to really shoot the plume far--I don't know, maybe 20 feet plus, whereas when you're going over an inch or less it tends to not throw it no too far. I was also dealing with a stiff SE wind too so that was a factor. He said it blows best to the right so I'll have to remember that. I can see why you'd want a pair of ski goggles when you're doing this, especially in high wind. I've got to remember to use my safety glasses-I was just having too much fun and didn't use them that first time.

All in all, I'm satisfied but not blown away. One thing-wow!, are you ever done fast on a, say 1 or 2 in snowfall like we had! I was actually throwing a bit more snow onto the driveway from the yard I was done so fast and I wanted to keep testing it.

I can see where you might want a bit more power but this will suffice, I think. Anyway, the real test will come when we have the 1 foot plus and EOD wall to deal with. I'll report back when I have to do that. I went to the local hardware store and picked up a bottle of CASTROL GX 5W30--the snowblower guy said about 3 driveways and change the oil. I also picked up a small (8 in) straight brush with medium-stiff bristles sticking out the end--kind of a rust cleaning brush, along w/a small handle snow brush with soft bristles. The little brush can get in the impeller area (spark plug unplugged and totally shutdown) and the snowbrush can clean the rest. Of course Ariens supplies the little black shovel that clips onto the top of the blade to get anything really stuck in there. I also got some mid-grade unleaded for the gas can.

So, it works, so far, and I can store it and move it around easily. Bring on the snow (not much of a problem in this area!).
nibbler


Joined: Mar 5, 2004
Points: 751

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #8   Nov 24, 2005 3:08 pm
Every so often someone mentions the "works better with more snow" phenomenom. The same thing happened with my 10.5HP blower.

Basically the throttle control only controls the low end of the engine's range. You typically run with the throttle set wide open and only move it to shut down. There is an governor that tries to maintain engine RPM. If you don't have enough load on the augers then the governor doesn't kick in and the snow dribbles out. Once you have enough load the governor lets the engine rev up and the snow flies. I've found that most of the  time going slower isn't the solution, going faster is. You get more snow, the load goes up, the governor kicks in and the white stuff flies.

If you start to get snow plowing, where the snow is being pushed forward in front of the blower, then you need to slow down. The augers aren't pulling the snow in fast enough and you need to move slower to let them do their job. Of course with a LOT of snow the machine can bog down due to too much load.

Have fun.
jogo


Location: Westchester N.Y.
Joined: Sep 8, 2003
Points: 463

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #9   Nov 24, 2005 3:09 pm
Drippys is an onlinr game server, ther is someone named Bob smith, and a littleBob smith there

Red Max EB78001 blower
Echo PB1000 blower
Sears ? blower
Sears 16" chainsaw
John Deere STX38
Murray 21" push mower
Echo SRM1501 weed wacker
Excell/Honda pressure washer
Ariens 11528
SnowPro


Location: Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
Joined: Mar 16, 2003
Points: 395

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #10   Nov 24, 2005 5:45 pm
Congratulations on your purchase!  You should get years of dependable service from it.  You already have WAY MORE machine than the equivalent piece of crap from Canadian Tire!

Ken

turnkey4099


Joined: Nov 26, 2005
Points: 1

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #11   Nov 26, 2005 6:18 pm
Just found this site - looks good.

I'm jealous.  I am still using a 5hp machine I rehabbed as a basket case years ago.  Drive is 3 car wide x 100 ft long fronting on a major 2-lane US highway (US195 in Eastern Wa).  Needless to say that even a 2" snowfall will build quite a plow berm across it.  I have to "nibble" at it in the lowest gear.  Same when I have to double (sometimes triple) blow.  That poor machine has handled banks over 4ft deep but it does take awhile.

Re: throw distance  - a governor will maintain whatever speed is set by the throttle, be it WOT or idled down.   Engine speed does not  not change due to load as long as it isn't heavy enough to overload the engine.  Snow will blow further if the auger is kept well loaded.  Why,  I don't know but it is easy to demonstrate.  Take say a 4" snow and hit it at whatever speed the machine will take.  Now drop gears down about half and compare the distance.  To me it is totally couter intuitive but that's the way it works.

Harry K

Garandman


Location: South Boston, MA
Joined: Mar 10, 2005
Points: 341

Re: End of Driveway (EOD) and smaller machines
Reply #12   Nov 27, 2005 7:35 am
You might consider using a synthetic oil.
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