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Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Snowblowers: Honda, Ariens, Toro, or Craftsman

Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions

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skier1


Location: South Eastern Wisconsin
Joined: Sep 28, 2009
Points: 35

Snowblowers: Honda, Ariens, Toro, or Craftsman
Original Message   Sep 28, 2009 2:53 pm
I am shopping for a snowblower and cannot find anyone with accurate reliablilty of any of the major brands. I read consumer reports, but they do not list anything about long term investment. I am leary of thier top pick as I have seen issues with that brand of motor elsewhere. I am likely to buy a 2 stage 9 horse (300cc ) as i live on a cul-du-sac adn get plowed in pretty regualrly.

I also am trying to be considerate of my 5'9" wife and her ability to use anything, and my over eager 11year old son that is 5'

Anyone that can help?

Replies: 16 - 18 of 18Next page of topicsPreviousAllView as Outline
nhmatt


Joined: Dec 21, 2008
Points: 104

Re: Snowblowers: Honda, Ariens, Toro, or Craftsman
Reply #16   Oct 21, 2009 9:39 pm
I don't see a difference between any of the brands anymore (except honda). Even Simplicity is starting to cheap out, and their older machines are tanks compared to what is being sold. They're pulling the same crap as Ariens now, with a stripped down model. Still, the "dealer" machine feels pretty rugged.

Honda is over-priced. I think their machines are 3x as good as the junk sold at Home Depot, but I don't think the actual act of snow removal via a snowblower is worth what they charge. At full-price, I'd just as soon buy garbage every 2-3 years and keep money in the bank in case global warming picks up speed.

That being said, my 1132TAS is still sleeping under its tarp in the shed, waiting............
borat


Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692

Re: Snowblowers: Honda, Ariens, Toro, or Craftsman
Reply #17   Oct 22, 2009 10:15 am
Can't say that I agree with buying garbage every few years rather than laying out the cash for a decent machine. First of all, we're supporting sub-par quality production and more importantly, having a failure prone, poorly designed machine that can barely blow your hat off would be frustrating indeed. I have no problem paying the right price for a good quality snow thrower. The $1500.00 that I spent on the pre-Briggs and Stratton Simplicity two years ago, was money well spent. It was a very good value and I'm certain that neither Simplicity nor the dealer didn't lose their shirt selling it for that price. I'd say that knowledgeable people know that a premium must be charged for quality. However, when the premium remains and quality slides as we are seeing with the leading domestic manufacturers, the consumer is being taken advantage of. Particularly brand loyalists who have trusted a manufacturer for decades. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to have purchased the last of the well built, reasonably priced machines would be wise to take very good care of them. The future is not looking too bright for high quality, reasonably priced domestic OPE. If the domestics continue to cheapen their products, we'll be left with no choice other than to shell out big money for Honda, Yamaha and who knows, maybe some new Chinese or other foreign upstarts!
aa335


Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434

Re: Snowblowers: Honda, Ariens, Toro, or Craftsman
Reply #18   Oct 22, 2009 2:13 pm
Borat,

You hit it right on the head.  I have a Honda snowblower and they are quite expensive for what they are.  However, after careful evaluation of all the domestic offering, I decided to suck it up and pay the premium price that they command.  Honda price is 2 times an equivalent domestic model (size, hp, features).  It doesn't blow snow twice as better just as much as a $60,000 car isn't twice as nice as a $30,000 car.  It isn't twice as thick or twice as heavy, or twice as powerful.  But it has two things that I wanted, tracks and hydro transmission.  And despite being lower hp rating (be it underrated or conservative), it is quite efficient at moving snow.

If you are fortunate to find a used Honda at good prices, that's awesome.  Those are hard to come by though.
This message was modified Oct 22, 2009 by aa335
Replies: 16 - 18 of 18Next page of topicsPreviousAllView as Outline
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