Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Buying a new snowblower. What will a bigger engine do for me?
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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PSchoolen
Joined: Jan 7, 2010
Points: 3
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Buying a new snowblower. What will a bigger engine do for me?
Original Message Jan 7, 2010 2:03 pm |
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Appreciate any help everyone here can provide. Already have acquired a wealth of knowledge.
Buying a new machine. Looking primarily at Ariens. They list max throwing distance the same for almost all their snowblowers. So what would a bigger engine do for me? For example I am weighing the 27" deluxe 249cc against the 28" pro 342cc. Disregarding the other feature differences, what will I get out of the bigger engine?
If it helps, this is going to be used on my parking lot that is 50'X50'. Mostly flat but the entire width of the parking lot is open to the street so I get 50' of deeper snow at the street due to city plows.
Thanks for any insight.
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amazer98
Joined: Dec 7, 2009
Points: 46
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Re: Buying a new snowblower. What will a bigger engine do for me?
Reply #1 Jan 7, 2010 2:37 pm |
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I have an Ariens Platiinum 24" with the 249cc engine. I've used it 3 times so far on snowfalls of about 5 inches. This is obviously not much of a challenge for any machine. The snowblower cut through the snow with more than enough power and shot it out like a cannon-- about 45-50 feet, I'd say... just as Ariens claims.
A bigger, even more powerful engine won't shoot snow any farther (if you look at the major manufacturers' spec sheets, you'll see that their intermediate and more heavy-duty blowers all shoot at 45 or 50 feet. The advantage of having a bigger engine is that you can make headway slightly quicker when faced with deeper snowfalls, especially of the heavy stuff.
But think about this. Up until maybe 10 years ago, an average snowblower had 6 or 7 horsepower. Though for legal reasons manufacturers are no longer using horsepower ratings on engines (I think somebody filed suit because the stated HP of a motor was one-tenth of an HP too high or something spurious like that), the 249cc B&S engine has something like 9HP.
Unless you are in a zone that gets lots of heavy snow, like the California Sierras or Buffalo, you won't need an engine bigger than the 249cc. Even then, I doubt you'd really need a bigger engine., I really like my 24" Platinum-- it's powerful, easy to turn (unlike the Deluxe 24 which i initially bought... that was a bear to turn and had no trigger to remotely disengage a wheel), small enough to tuck into a corner of the garage, and yet makes quick work of our driveway (60 feet long with a 40x40 area outside the garage).
Just my $.02-- hope this helps!
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