Single stages struggle quite a bit with end of the end of driveway piles (EOD). If you have a tiny clearing area and a few paths then struggling a bit with EOD is ok if you have a small entrance like one car wide. For a high EOD you can break it up with a shovel with no lifting just move it around so the small mouth and no wheel drive single stage can get it. That could be a worthwhile trade if you are trying to save space in the garage.
They toss very well and do very well in 1-5 inches provided you have a flat surface driveway. If it has mounds, domes or valleys then the single stage will have a difficult time an be very bouncy when traveling over the irregularities. It pulls itself along by the augers lightly touching the ground. The metal auger blades have mounted rubber tips that are constructed of material something like a drive belt. An irregular driveway beats up on a single stage.
They do very well with 1-4 inch loose wet slush generally better than a two stage. They don't do so well with harder packed wet snow 5 inches or more.
A small two stage will cover most situations easily except for wet slush. In general for an average clearing area a single stage is a nice backup and good for 1-3 inch storms. It's like going out with a broom for a quick sweep and convenient. They are fun to use as they can really toss a long way, 25 feet.
A small two stage is great at light snows but also heavier snows. They can handle the load and toss very well. It will also get the EOD without a problem.
If you were up here in Mass a two stage would be better. For LI it's a tougher call. Shoot for the average storm. If you mostly see small quantities of wet snow and an EOD that's not too high and you don't mind struggling with it for a few of the bigger storms then a single stage over might be best. If you have a rough surface driveway then the two stage.
trouts2
This message was modified Nov 14, 2008 by trouts2