Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Single Stage EOD
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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Garth
Joined: Oct 30, 2011
Points: 10
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Single Stage EOD
Original Message Dec 24, 2011 9:46 am |
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For single stage users, can these be used on end of driveway hard chunks? I hear you can break it up first with a shovel but seems there would still be hard chunks. Would it beat up the machine? I live in New England and because of several different factors I have to compromise and the single stage Toro 621 would be my best compromise right now. I have a driveway that is a little over 2 cars long and do a run of about 10 yards by the mailbox all EOD and clear out an area going to the deck in back on one side and for the oil man on the other that would both be over grass one about 10 yards long and the other about 15 yards long. Have you ever done EOD with one of these.
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #18 Dec 29, 2011 12:14 pm |
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The video does not seem to be any big conspiracy. It gives a fairly accurate portrayal of the difference between the two machines based on my experience with 2450’s and CCR2000’s. The guy is struggling with the EOD and doing quite a bit of pushing once clear of the EOD. On the sections where the snow is lower than the SS’s buck top he’s still doing quite a bit of pushing. It’s much better than shoveling. He got the job done and that would be enough for many people. Many would describe that as “I have no problem”. For others it would be too much effort. Knee_Biter say he has “no problem with large amounts of EOD”. He a bit north of me and on average gets more snow. The 2450’s I’ve used have big problems handling EOD here requiring much more work than what the guy in the video is doing. How can it be KB says it’s “no problem”? Maybe for him that amount of work is a trivial issue. For me I want the experience the women in the video is having, mostly guiding the machine along. Every storm here I start out with a single stage clearing out to the garage. It’s no problem. I’m fresh and some pushing there is ok. But it gets old quickly when I use it for the rest of the area in bigger snow greater than 3-4 inches and especially the EOD. If you don’t mind doing a lot of pushing and struggling an SS is fine. They’re easy to get out and use, simpler maintenance, back up fast, and easy to store. Putting up with a little effort to get the good points is worth it to many. At least for me the price of new SS’s is off the map. A better value to me would be a small or mid-level two stage. The initial post asked about chunks and described his clearing area. EOD chunks would be a big problem for an SS. The driveway is pretty small so some effort there with an SS would not be so much of a big deal. The EOD section would get old quick unless you don’t mind like KB. The paths would be a problem also. They would be somewhat ok when the ground is frozen as the machine would bounce along with uneven ground but for the beginning and end of winter you would be tearing up lawn.
This message was modified Dec 29, 2011 by trouts2
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FullThrottle
Joined: Feb 11, 2011
Points: 17
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #19 Dec 29, 2011 12:19 pm |
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That's old hat.
It's abundantly clear that it's an Arien's commercial and the guy on the SS machine is dogging it. Not hardly a fair comparison.
No one is saying that an SS machine will do what a two stage machine is capable of. However, it will perform better than what that video indicates. I have a Toro 221Q two stroke with the engine rpms properly set. It will embarrass the SS machine in that video. x 2 Thats an infomercial like the guy that cant cook eggs or peel potatos he's a duefus unless he has this product. How many times do you blow from the street in. They both have their strengths and weaknesses. You could pull the SS out of the truck and be halfway done before you could unload a 2 stage. You can pull a SS right through a drift and start anywhere you want. Just as from the begining of time the right tool for the right job
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FrankMA
Location: Merrimack Valley/Northeastern Mass
Joined: Jul 1, 2010
Points: 587
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #20 Dec 29, 2011 5:28 pm |
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x 2 Thats an infomercial like the guy that cant cook eggs or peel potatos he's a duefus unless he has this product. How many times do you blow from the street in. They both have their strengths and weaknesses. You could pull the SS out of the truck and be halfway done before you could unload a 2 stage. You can pull a SS right through a drift and start anywhere you want. Just as from the begining of time the right tool for the right job It is kind of funny the way the guy makes it look like he's struggling so hard to make the SS work the EOD slop. Very smart marketing as well using a woman to operate the SnoTek in order to show how easy it is to use and manipulate. Most women are scared of 2 stage machines (I know my sister is) so having a woman using that equipment kind of takes the edge off of that a bit.
Toro Wheel Horse 522xi GT, Honda HS928TA, Honda HS621AS, Honda HS520A, Toro CCR3000 (work in progress), Honda HS624WA (sold 08/23/2010), Stihl BR550 Backpack Blower, Stihl MS250, McCulloch MS1635, Honda EM6500SX Generator
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #21 Dec 29, 2011 6:08 pm |
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It is kind of funny the way the guy makes it look like he's struggling so hard to make the SS work the EOD slop. Very smart marketing as well using a woman to operate the SnoTek in order to show how easy it is to use and manipulate. Most women are scared of 2 stage machines (I know my sister is) so having a woman using that equipment kind of takes the edge off of that a bit. True, but all she was doing is holding on the handles, wiggle up and down, wiggle left and right. Basically using fast twitch muscles. Let's see how well she fares negotiating turns near obstacles, shifting gears to match snow conditions, and reversing, or even setting the scraper bar height. :) Or even finding a place to park in a crowded garage. That's the part of owning a 2 stage machine that isn't shown. The video is smart marketing, although deceptive and skewed.
This message was modified Dec 29, 2011 by aa335
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FrankMA
Location: Merrimack Valley/Northeastern Mass
Joined: Jul 1, 2010
Points: 587
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #23 Dec 29, 2011 7:30 pm |
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People think that because you're using a piece of OPE that what you're doing is an easy task. They fail to realize that it just makes the arduous task a bit easier than it used to be before OPE. I'm in pretty good shape and can say first hand that if you're not able to bull around a 250 lb. machine for 2 - 3 hours at a time after a 24" snow storm, you better farm out your snow clearing duties to someone who is up to the task. I come in after clearing a typical mid-winter New England snowstorm and am soaked in sweat and beat down like a dog. A quick shower and 2 shots of brandy (not neccessarily in that order) and I'm about ready for the rack.
Toro Wheel Horse 522xi GT, Honda HS928TA, Honda HS621AS, Honda HS520A, Toro CCR3000 (work in progress), Honda HS624WA (sold 08/23/2010), Stihl BR550 Backpack Blower, Stihl MS250, McCulloch MS1635, Honda EM6500SX Generator
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #24 Dec 29, 2011 8:38 pm |
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Ha, I'm glad I'm not the only one. My 2-stage sure beats shoveling, that's for sure! But I'll admit that I'd kind of had enough after clearing the driveway after a few of the storms last winter. Between wrestling it around at the end of a pass, or fighting with it to keep it going straight, it still takes something out of you. I'm hoping that the new blower, with a differential, will make it so I'm not fighting the machine as much.
borat, nice video! I'm still considering rigging up a throttle "override" like you did. But I want to see how my SS performs "stock" first. As long as I won't destroy the engine by revving it higher, then I don't have a problem doing it.
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: Single Stage EOD
Reply #27 Dec 29, 2011 11:44 pm |
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Excellent memory & guesses, borat. It's 98cc, 3hp, the manual says 4300 RPM. I have the governor adjusted to 4600 RPM currently. You're correct, it has a vane-type governor. I'd thought about trying to find a way add a bit more tension to the governor spring, to raise the RPMs on demand.
It now occurs to me that I could sort of take the opposite approach. Mess with the governor to get it to, say, 6000 RPM. That way the max speed (the potentially damaging end of the spectrum) is still governed. Then add something to *lower* the speed on demand (that could potentially be simpler, since the idle stop would hopefully keep you from being able to go too low and stalling). One of my concerns with trying this is accidentally over-revving it. Either by being dumb, or having something like my cable get stuck, and winding it up to 10,000+ with no load. Might blow a connecting rod or something.
I'll try it in a storm or two first and see how it goes. Unfortunately, with the engine being completely buried under the big cover, you can't access any of this stuff without taking the machine apart. I can't even hook up a tachometer without opening it up. I guess I could have left a wire wrapped around the plug wire, and had it dangle out of the cover somewhere (so I could just alligator-clip the tach to that wire), but I didn't think of that at the time :) It does seem really weird to me to have the engine so inaccessible. Even just trying to do something like use starting fluid would be interesting, never mind simply pulling the spark plug to look at it. I never realized how much I take that for granted on 2-stages.
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