Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > How Long Should The Deflector Be?
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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JimmyM
Joined: Dec 20, 2009
Points: 82
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Re: How Long Should The Deflector Be?
Reply #6 Oct 13, 2010 10:41 am |
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Thank you, I'll take that as a compliment. It's quite easy actually, I just have to point it up and it shoots all by itself. Just pull this orange lever on the console. re: those flappy things are only useful with the light powdery snow in windy conditions. It was a compliment. "Shoots all by itself". WOW you DO have skills. I don't have an orange lever on mine. It's a CubCadet. I agree. Light snow on a windy day.
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DavidNJ
Joined: Sep 26, 2010
Points: 206
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Re: How Long Should The Deflector Be?
Reply #7 Oct 13, 2010 11:54 am |
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Now blowing back is a problem. Even with a cab it is problematic, coating the clear plastic and blocking the view. This should keep the snow stream a little tighter. From the pictures it looks like it double the length on the Husqvarna. Husqvarna marches to a different drummer in snowthowers. Their handlebar design is similar to Simplicity, but taken a step further. They use cables to remotely rotate the chute. Their friction wheel control is variable instead of notches. Their scoop has reinforcing beads on its back surface. And they decided to spend the money to manufacture and add this part that is probably similar in cost to drift breakers. In many areas a great product isn't one thing, it is the sum of lots of little things.
This message was modified Oct 13, 2010 by DavidNJ
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DavidNJ
Joined: Sep 26, 2010
Points: 206
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Re: How Long Should The Deflector Be?
Reply #10 Oct 13, 2010 2:26 pm |
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I would say that Toro beats its drum louder and faster in that regard, IMO. They have closed drum auger (discontinued) , pivoting scraper, powershift models (discontinued) which moves the wheel axle rearward to put more weight on the front bucket, and their PowerMax auger system. Just to name a few out of the box innovations.
The problem I have with Husqvarna product is the dealer network. Around here, finding a dealer who carries Husq products is harder than a BMW dealer in Detroit. You can get some valued priced Husq products at Home Depot, but not the higher models. While Husq webpage shows quite a few products, I can only find 10% of those locally. They are the Peugeot of snowblowers.
Peugeot has dominated the World Rally Championship:
The local Ariens dealer is also a Husqvarna, the others are about 30 minutes away. They are much more common for mowers than snowblowers. Porsche was once a similar boutique brand. In the Deere/Husqvarna one seems a little better designed in the details, a little higher quality components, maybe a much faster impeller speed, has left/right freewheel steering and hydrostatic drive with both its advantages (low speed, moisture tolerance) and disadvantages (astronomincal maintenance costs). The other is appears more rugged, has a limited slip differential, very slick electric chute controls, and is $400 cheaper.
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