>>> Was tired and worn. <<<
It's a sweetheart picked up for $30 and gone through. It was in commercial service and did not see a lot of maintenance. It received about 150-200 in parts and at least 10 hours of prep and paint work. Dual night lights, huge tires, 10hp, 30 inch bucket and in fine shape waiting for snow. I think it's pretty easy to tell I've too much time on my hands waiting for snow.
That model is a tiger but came with a very short chute. The Deere bolted right on and the crank teeth a match that gives a good improvement in distance. I've got the remote hood control but it never got installed. It would be a nice touch but I am saving the cable for a future repair. It's $110 for a replacement cable and I put enough into the Snapper already.
Six casters. The dolley was built for a 650 pound military WWII radio transmitter in the cellar, here during my ham phase. It now see's service as a dead blower carrier, things with locked gears or big buckets too heavy to lug around. It's big and a pain in the a$$ to store but useful at carting stuff. I'd use it more but my garage has uneven wood boards. The driveway has many mounds and cracks which make it tough to roll with a load but sometimes worth the agrivation with heavy stuff.
I've got a hydralic table on casters for most carting around of stuff but the dolly is good for big awkward things. The dolly generally does not cart working tracked guys like Honda and Yamaha. The get moved mostly without power by tipping them way back to ride on the back of the wheels. MTD's and Yamaha's are fairly easy to move without power but not Hondas are tough. I only do short moves here so no big deal. It would be more effort to dig out the dolly.
>>Is there a track snowblower somehwere we can't see, a third point perhaps in this triangle, one that gets together with dolly ?
I'd have to confess, if I had a Honda and a big garage with a flat cement floor it would have a perminant relationship Linda.
This message was modified Dec 11, 2010 by trouts2