Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Which single stage has the most power
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: Which single stage has the most power
Reply #4 Oct 27, 2010 10:56 am |
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I was only curios does the 421/221 or even any current models on the market may have a bit more bite on the EOD/overnight plowed snow... I think how well the single snowblower bite into EOD depends on how stiff the rubber paddles as much as the horsepower. Your current HS520 has a stiff center paddle but it is a little down on power, IMHO. It throws snows well as long as you don't over feed it and slow down the auger too much. There's really no magic to EOD. You need stiff metal augers moving at slower rotations of the 2 stage snowblower to break apart that dense snow. Open helical augers are good at this without clogging. Rubber paddles can only do so much. You can have a lot of hp on a single stage but that thing will just bounce and dance around violently. Been there, done it. Best thing to do is to soften up the snow with a shovel, or pony up the cash for a 24" to 26" 2-stage with the largest engine available for that class, and the most aggressive serrated auger. I don't want to disappoint you, but single stage are good on many aspects but EOD with packed snow or higher than the bucket is always a challenge. The best you can do is keep ahead of the game by going out snowblowing more often while the snow is fresh and uncompacted.
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superbuick
Joined: Feb 23, 2009
Points: 138
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Re: Which single stage has the most power
Reply #8 Oct 27, 2010 1:38 pm |
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The Honda HS520 does not compare to the Honda HS621 or the Toro 221 at all in my book. Both the 621 and the 221 have considerable power advantages over the 520, which uses a low-end, honda in name only GC series 4 stroke. The 221's 2 cycle is 141ccs and known within the commercial lawn mowing industry to be the most powerful walk behind mower engine made (known as the lawn boy duraforce in those circles) and the HS621 uses a commercial grade true honda GX series motor. I find the impeller design to be a little better on the Toro as well, but I wouldn't turn down a Honda HS621 were one to come my way. I had a Toro Snow Commander last year (which also uses the 141cc R*Tek 2 stroke) and while it had plenty of power and was big, I found it a bit awkward to use when compared to the 221. It didn't seem to offer any advantage other than 2 inches more width (who cares) and if anything was slightly less powerful-seeming than the 221 because it had to turn an extra paddle (3 as opposed to 2 on the 221). The briggs model single stage (seems to be everyone other than toro and honda have bought and badge engineered this model for 2010/2011) looks promising, especially in the auger design, but I can't see that motor being more powerful than the R*Tek, especially when the 8.75 "gross torque" OHV briggs mower engines can't hold a candle to the Duraforce (I would know, I have both). As far as the squall, no amount of power will help that thing until it gets a better auger design. The auger like it has is inefficient and prone to clogging - in fact that design is primarily responsible for single stage snowblowers getting a bad name.
This message was modified Oct 27, 2010 by superbuick
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