Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Two kinds of skid shoes - Honda 928 - which to use?
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: Two kinds of skid shoes - Honda 928 - which to use?
Reply #4 Nov 25, 2012 7:04 pm |
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This was posted earlier this year by me: " From my experience running both side and rear skids in contact with the pavement has too much friction. It will be harder to turn and the bucket gets moved around too much when going across cracks and joints. It is especially worse if you set the scraper bar real close to the ground, not enough snow to keep the rear skids gliding smoothly on. I'm only using the side skids now." If you're running tracks, the rear skids are better to use. It makes turning easier. The trade off is that you have no protection of the side skids when one side of the bucket drops below the pavement.
This message was modified Nov 25, 2012 by aa335
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: Two kinds of skid shoes - Honda 928 - which to use?
Reply #8 Mar 3, 2013 3:00 pm |
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I bought a set of commerical grade skid shoes as my old ones are worn out and hoping to resolve a pulling issue. Not sure why the instruction says DO NOT use the nuts attached inside the bucket when securing new skids shoes but wants me take the nuts out and insert the screws from inside of the bucket. Anyone knows why? Are these commerical grade skids any better other than being thicker and longer lasting? The commercial skids are quite stout and will hold up well. They are quite short and narrow, which prevents too much floating over snow and keeps the bucket and scraper bar close to the pavement The downside is that there is a lot weight over a small surface area of the skids, it tends to catch on surface irregularities more often and changes the direction of the snowblower. I'm currently trying out a different kind of skids, they are bigger and made out of UHDPE, thick and heavy plastic which glides more nicely, but probably will not hold up as well as the metal commercial skids. When I first got my commercial skids shoes, the instructions left me a bit bewildered why there are extra parts and they don't want me to use the existing holes on the bucket housing. Do follow the instructions drilling your new mounting holes and use the kit provided metal spacer plate and through bolts and nuts. I wasn't too crazy about drilling 4 holes in a brand new bucket to install skid shoes, but I'm convinced it's the right thing to do. The spacer plate provides are thicker and wider clamping surface for the skids. Without them, the bucket sides are not thick and strong enough and will bend if you hit the skids on something. Also, the original holes are too close to the edge of the bucket, it will only be a matter of time before it tears.
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