Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Never owned a snow blower - thoughts on what will work?
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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gdoll
Joined: Nov 18, 2010
Points: 2
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Never owned a snow blower - thoughts on what will work?
Original Message Nov 18, 2010 3:41 pm |
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I live in Calgary - we get a moderate amount of snow, rarely more than 8 to 10inches at a time, usually in the 2-4" range. The issue here is snow drifts. I live in a north facing house at the south end of a cul de sac and get drifts all the time on the bottom half of driveway. My driveway is for a 3car garage - not super long (probably 25ft, but easily 40 ft wide. I have been reading lots about single stage throwers - i like the fact they clean to the pavement, but am concerned if they can throw the snow far enough or can chew through a foot deep snow drifts a few times a year. The other option of course is the 2 stage throwers - they seem a bit big and I've read they don't get down to the pavement. I am also not the most mechanically inclined individual in the world... Help?? Any thoughts on what my best bets would be? I need something that my wife would be comfortalbe using as well. Any comments are appreciated...
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JGtravelor
Joined: Jan 14, 2011
Points: 13
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Re: Never owned a snow blower - thoughts on what will work?
Reply #27 Jan 14, 2011 5:47 pm |
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There are two reasons to get a 2 stage snow blower. One is the width of the driveway and the other is when you get that heavy wet snow. Unless you want to blow the snow halfway and then have twice as much to blow to get it out into the yard a two stage is the only way to go. Wind as you mentioned could also effect how far a single stage blower is going to go. Whether or not the snow blower is going to get down to the pavement depends on how flat your pavement is and if the wheeled unit is using side skid plates then your not going to get the scoop to drag onto the pavement but the next sunny day shoulds take care of the rest. After John Deere, Ariens and snow king I finally bought the Honda HS928TA which runs on two tractor threads. The good points are: 3 step height control selected by a pedal, easy to start, no pressure plate and no shifting. The electrostatic drive works like a joy stick. You can go a slow as you want forward or backwards. Once you squeeze the auger handle down on the right, once you squeeze the left drive handle, you don't need to squeeze the right one any longer. It stay locked until you release the left side. No wheels or chains are required so you get much better traction to drive through the big drifts and the frozen sludge at the end of the driveway. The pedal height adjustment will allow you to scrape the driveway clean after the heavy snow have been removed. The tractor treads alows you to basically walk behind it basically following it, not pushing it. The tractor model works fantastic for longwide driveways. The engine is rock solid and easy to start. PS with the tractor treads you can drive right up a snow bank to transport it into a pickup truck.. You can't do that with wheeled snow blower. The bad points with the tractor tread design is that it is obviously not as easy to turn around 180 degrees. It isn't bad with a short forward and short reverse action to turn it around, You'll get the hang of it once you stop trying to spin it like a wheeled snow blower. The only other point is the price you have to pay for a quality, long lasting snow blower that doesn't have all the traction problems of those with tension and dirt accumulating on a pressure plate on the other systems. You can certainly buy a $1,500 snow blower that may work for one winter of 3-4 storms. Then budget the repair and service and possibly transportation charge every year for as long as you own the thing. I bought my Honda in Jan 2003 and it is as good as the day I bought it. I live in New Hampshire which gets some good storms. You can save $500 by ordering a new blower in the early fall, How much over $2,800 you have to spend depends on the widths and light options which in your case you shouldn't need lights on a wide short driveway when you have garage lights. PS The guy in front of me bought the same unit and returned the Craftsman snow blower he bought the week before. I love mine and it saves me about 2 hours on my huge driveway.
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tkrotchko
Location: Maryland
Joined: Feb 9, 2010
Points: 143
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Re: Never owned a snow blower - thoughts on what will work?
Reply #33 Jan 15, 2011 9:04 am |
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That's definetly a skewed test. How about in actual condition of a residential property with sidewalks, walkways, and shorter driveways. Homeowners dont have huge commercial parking lots. All that was shown was cons of single stage versus pros of 2 stage. The price comparison wasn't fair , high end single versus low end 2 stage. Its absolutely a skewed test. However, my observation last year with my tracked MTD and the neighbor's toro single stagers last year in deep snow: The single stage is fine as long as the snow doesn't get too high. That means in practice for large storms you'll go out several times. This is not a criticism, simply an observation. I was impressed by the single stage toro, and I could see having one in places where it might be tight to take the Honda 1132. I have a large area to cover and a single stage isn't for me, but for most suburanites and city dwellers around me, its probably the right choice. For me in the country with a long road, the single stage is just outmatched with the conditions I get.
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: Never owned a snow blower - thoughts on what will work?
Reply #36 Jan 15, 2011 9:51 am |
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Most people don't own four snowblowers or even more than one. For me, I just prefere owning one snowblower so a two-stage is the best option given my situation. When the snow is light and dry (i.e., 1-2"), a shovel is very effective and quick. I use my blower for EOD or when snow is higher than 3". I think you're trying to be slight. :) . I own just 3 snowblowers. I just don't get enough playtime with 3 single stage snowblowers. Owning multiple snowblowers isnt portrayed in Arien's video. Otherwise, a 24-28" snowblower would embarass the little 22" 2 stage in the wide open field and EOD. And the little 21" Toro single would embarass that 22" 2 stage in tight quarters and 6 inch deep snow. But thats apples to oranges comparison. That 22" Ariens 2 stage was designed as an in-betweener. For certain homeowners, this product is a perfect "compromise" to deal with EOD and deep snow. However, if anyone have big areas to cover, a 22" is tiny and would take too long. And if that EOD is packed and crusty, the 22" would barely do the job. I'm sure I can get a long fine with the 22" too. It comes down to technique.
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