If I may make two suggestions first for the fog issue activate the A/C will using the heater and the all the windows will remain clear the second as for the clog shoot we use a power drill with a 3" diameter and 12" shaft ice auger it makes for easy and quick work Yves from Canada
Inverted blowers are nothing new. Been using mine for about 5 years now and I bought it used. They are amazing. I'm limited to about a foot of snow as my gear driven tractor feeds the blower too fast around 1 foot running at proper PTO speed. BTW, with my 7' wide Pronovost INV-80 blower behind my Ford 5000 (60+hp) crawling at 1.4mph, a foot of snow would be feeding the blower at a rate of just over 14 cubic feet per second. This is approximately half the volume of a pickup truck bed every second. So, on the really big storms where over a foot is forecast, I do need to do a mid-storm clearing, but typically it's a one and done once the storm is over. What is amazing is that regardless of how much typically falls from 2 - 12 inches, the time it takes to clean up is within 10 minutes. Takes as few as 45 minutes and the longest is just shy of an hour. This is with a 1/4 mile shared drive, 3 houses, and the snowbank cutback on the road. And, even with the fairly heavy snows we get here in New England, I can throw that roughly 50'. It will also throw any rocks too. Gotta be careful where the chute is aiming. (^_^)
I can not agree more about circular driveways. I am a Director of Facilities and at my last school district we had a bus loop at our elementary school that was a circle with curbs and sidewalks around it. So not only do you have to deal with the hassle of trying to catch all of the snow as you plow around curves but you had no where to push it to the side so you have to carry it all out of the circle to stack it. I am a firm believer that any site planner needs to have experience plowing and mowing before being allowed to design parking lots and landscaping I hope everyone has great holiday season coming up
The vocational school I worked at had a circle and I would plow 1/4 of the circle at a time, backing up and plowing straight. We finally got a snowblower on a tractor 😊
Great video, I have used almost every kind of snow removal tools and equipment over the last 50 yrs and that rear mounted blower design I'd say is the best i have seen for some years and that is allot less neck stretching for you as an operator, fortunate for me i no longer need anything that big just a walk behind blower and thats only 6 or 7 times a year 👍
One advantage of conventional snowblowers (not sure about the inverted ones)is it allows me with my 54 inch MK Martin on the 3 pt hitch of my 1023e to punch above our weight! I can punch through 2 and 3 foot drifts and piles of snow I could never hope to push/plough through!
Great video as always. With regard to fogging inside, i run my kioti with the rear window cracked open up against the opener/window lock, and leave my A/C on . Zero fogging, and i live in canadas far north where it is cold.
Spent three hours clearing wet snow the other day. I've learned my lesson and will wait for sunset (lower temps) moving forward. A bit of wd40 helped move thr snow along.
One of the things I do for the fog issue inside my cab is have my heat on, but I crack my rear window open an inch or two. That allows me to turn the heat up a bit more to defog the glass, but it regulates the temp inside the cab so things don't get too warm.
@@ToasterrBath i have that option in mine. But it still gets too warm either way, so cracking the rear window open helps keep the cab at a more reasonable temp for me. Though, I do tend to just end up in a hoodie even on the coldest of days, but I take my coat with me, just in case...
most of the snow i deal with is pretty fluffy, but for the early and late season glop, i spray that ceramic automotive coating all over the inside of my blower (don't forget the chute). 1 application early season gets me through a normal year (~800 driveways, ~250" of snow). heavy years i may have to apply again mid season. put it on when it's warmer (or in a warm garage). it just globs up and does nothing if you put it on cold metal
In weather like this I see a major need for a cab! I have never dealt with that kind of snow, but with that much driveway I imagine it would be like clearing a big shopping center parking lot.
Keep the AC on in the cab with the vents directed at the windows and you will eliminate or greatly reduce the window fog. I run a 4066R for commercial snow removal and have zero issues with window fog.
I have a loop in my driveway that only gets used as a parking spot for my neighbor's horse trailer and a few family members. I break it down to a bunch of straight shots pushing the snow a few feet beyond the pavement. Trying to do a continuous curve with a blower or pusher is a little quicker, but it always leaves windrows.
Great video on the snow removal and the use of different types of equipment to solve different issues. I had a 6' Martin Meteor Pull Type Blower and it was an EXCELLENT blower. I had spine surgery last year, and nerve damage resulted and I could not physically get into my JD 4720. I had to downsize and went with a JD 3046R mid pro with a 5' blower on the front. I think I will be happy, but time will tell. Thanks Corey for all the information and help you pass on to all of us. Bob SWWI
15:04 Hydrostatic tractors have a big heater directly under the cab. If I plowed more than two hours at a time I needed A/C, even down to zero degrees or below zero in full sun.
Maybe you could try adding some external mounted 12V fans inside the cab to keep the side windows clear? these get used on RV's and busses to keep their large windows clear.
@@GoodWorksTractors I have a kioti NX with an NK Martin 78 inch pull type. The windows fog up sometimes I just turn the AC on and crank the heat up a little higher and it defog the windows right away works great. I love my snowblower I put a piece of 3 inch tubing all the way across the rear to use as a gauge it works a lot better than trying to use the side gauges that came on it.I have a aggregate driveway and those stones always annoy me when they go rattling through the blower that’s why I put the piece of tubing on it bridges all the high and low spots side to side and keeps the blower from digging in you can zip right along with that on there no problem
I have had a circular driveway for over thirty years and have never had any problems blowing snow with my 47" JD Quick Hitch blower on first my 445 and now my 1026R. As for the chute clogging, this is greatly reduced by adding rubber flaps on the end of the fan to remove the clearance between the fan housing and the fan. I seldom clog my chute anymore with this simple modification. A lot of people use old conveyor belting, but I could not find any locally so I used the old side wall from some old tires I have laying around and this had worked fine for many years. After the tires are cut up, the township will collect them in the spring.
I am betting it is for cost considerations they don't do it. I had to drill three holes in each fan blade, make a clamp out of flat stock and drill it to match the fan blade holes and then cut the rubber to fit. Fortunately for me, I just bought a new 47" blower to replace the one I gave to my son along with the old 445. Unfortunately the new blower came with a plastic fan and I had to buy the old steel fan from JD before I ever used the blower. This made it easier to drill the fan and make the strap clamps. I then had to fit the rubber pieces to the housing after I re-assembled the blower and this took a couple of hours getting it right. I would install one flapper and then run the blower to seat the flapper to the housing and then install the next. I used silicone grease on the rubber to keep it from burning and the system works great. I have blown my driveway twice since the Lake Michigan snow machine turned on this season. I will go out again tomorrow to do it for the third time. I am glad I tore the blower apart, I found one of the bearing lock collars not secured properly on the auger shaft and I had that shaft ruined on my original blower I bought in 1995 when the bearing was allowed to spin on the shaft. This also allowed me to Anti-Seize the shaft where it is inserted into the enclosed chain drive case. This has been known to rust the auger gear box/fan shaft to that chain drive box output shaft. While I had the new fan out, I installed a grease fitting to keep it easily greased. JD installs grease fittings on the Augers, just not the fans. Several people have reported the fan rusting to the shaft so hard they could not move it even with the shear bolt removed.
Why not an optional kit then? Snowblowers aren’t cheap to begin with. They are generally the most expensive tool one can buy to remove snow. So folks buying them are already planning on “blowing” a pile of cash. I’m playing devils advocate here. It’s not a new concept and surely every snowblower manufacturer is aware of the mod. They also test the heck out of their designs before market.
I first ran into the flapper mod on the JD forums and there are people on Ebay selling kits and I bought one. It didn't come with rubber pieces with cording between the plys and wore out quickly. After asking questions on the forums, I decided on the rubber sidewalls from my old tires. This greatly reduced the chute clogging when i was blowing snow along side the county road in front of my mail box. It will not stop all blockages, but I now seldom have to unblock the chute, maybe once or twice a season. Well worth the time and effort in my opinion.
Doesn’t really matter the tool, I would never wait for 30” of snow to fall before starting to move it. Tackle it every 4-6” whether with a blower, pusher, or blade.
Done it before! As long as the tractor has clearance to keep moving forward, do a pass with the blower a foot off the ground, then go back and set it on the ground. Unless you keep a conventional blower kicking around for those days and to chew up snowbanks 😂
Courtney I have a Kubota BX2380 and the first couple of big dumps in the third week of November were heavy wet snow. I have the front mount Commercial Land Pride blower and it handled the 20” of wet snow that had water on the bottom with no issues. I cranked the RPM and moved slower and it threw the snow ok. Not as far as flaky snow but enough to get it away from the driveway. We’ve had over 220cm of snow to date and its lake effect squalling again today with whiteouts all day. Wish I could send you a pic! I only had one plug up and I knew it was coming because the snow/slush was in a pool of water that had drained off a carport roof. I cleared the plug and finished blowing that mess away! So far with the colder weather wet snow shouldn’t be an issue. I’ve cleared the snow off my roof 4 times to date and our streets in the Soo, Ontario are down to one lane off the main roads! Looking outside right now I can barely see the houses across the street. I clear out 4 driveways with the little BX2380. I make sure that when I’m done I clean as much of the snow off the tractor and the blower before I park it in the garage and it gets plugged into an oil pan heater and battery minder. I’ve used over 7 gallons of diesel so far and it’ll be more if the squalls let up tonight. The great thing about a blower is you aren’t left with huge piles of snow and don’t have to plow a long way off the driveway like you would with a snow pusher. Enjoy your TH-cam feed and yup you can’t beat a heated cab😁
Courtney, I would try very hard to look around a find someone with an 80” cyclone near you and do a side by side. I was just watching, as it pertains to the clogging issue. I think that issue your having is more MK Martin, I go through some nasty stuff with my cyclone. Does it plug at times. Yes, but it’s always my fault. And the circumstances that are causing yours to plug aren’t an issue with the cyclone.
Hey Courtney, thank you for your videos. They are a great source of info. Looking for your opinion on a snow pusher. I own a Kioti DK4710se cab tractor and have settled on a HLA 1800 series. Just trying to decide if I should get 6' or 7'. I think that's a 7' on your DK? Any times you wish you had a 6' instead?
Howdy, I think either size would be fine. It's more about having enough weight on the back for traction to push. I had originally thought the 84" would be pushing the limits, but now on my second year, I don't even think about it. Only downside is my pusher is wider than my rear blower. I have to pay more attention when backing up by objects as it's easy to think I'm in the clear once my blower goes by. However, my pusher sticks out further to the side. Hope that makes sense.
@@GoodWorksTractors Thank you. That is one of my main concerns. I sometimes use the blower on a winding wood road and could see me hooking a tree with the back of the 7' pusher while going backwards, or worse the side of my house/shop. While it would be nice to have the extra width while pushing which would keep the tractor further from side objects, I think I will stick to the 6' and make the extra couple of passes. Thanks again and keep up the great work.
@@GoodWorksTractorsDupont also sells a spray on snow and ice repellant that snowblower folks like to use. I haven’t tried it, yet but it gets excellent reviews.
circular drive a LOT easier with a conventional angle plow.. Just wind-row the snow either in or out by just driving in circles. Done many on residential and commercial jobs
well I can certainly see that you don't live in Minnesota when a blizzard goes through that dumps 2' of snow you have drifts that are 8' high or higher that wannabe thing isn't going to do nothing that's why I have a blower on the front of the payloader i have a blower on the 1025r for small snows only thing wrong is you have to twist your head around to blow it loader on front for scaling ice and blower in back blow snow you can atleast blow drifts 4' high
That’s a playback speed setting on your device. My voice was not sped up and if anything I spoke slower in this video compared to normal. You can slow it down or speed it up with the controls.
9 minutes; now you know why I took my M-K Martin front mount snow blower off and haven't used it in 4 years. I strictly use the front bucket and back blade to clear snow.
2 'If' here; (1) If you put snow on the road, You can be charged if there is an accident. (2) If you are charged you WILL end up with the bills from the accident.
Products in video:
MK Martin Meteor Performance Pull-Type Snow Blower: tinyurl.com/2a6krpys
HLA Snow Pusher: www.goodworkstractors.com/?s=hla+snow+pusher
Loved this video. Thanks to all your help ive got my first tractor. Always love the informative stuff put in action.
It looks like a pretty good blower. Thanks for the look.
Thanks! It really is a beast.
For my circle driveway I use a front "v" plow on my RTV1100. I stay warm, listen to tunes and the snow is pushed away.
V-blades are the best, l have a 3pt rear V-blade. Works great, then when l back up it automatically becomes a rear V-scoop for cleaning up
If I may make two suggestions first for the fog issue activate the A/C will using the heater and the all the windows will remain clear the second as for the clog shoot we use a power drill with a 3" diameter and 12" shaft ice auger it makes for easy and quick work Yves from Canada
Always run a/c. Nice one on the power drill, that would get it done quick haha!
@@GoodWorksTractorsHave you checked to see if the A/C compressor is kicking on?
Inverted blowers are nothing new. Been using mine for about 5 years now and I bought it used. They are amazing. I'm limited to about a foot of snow as my gear driven tractor feeds the blower too fast around 1 foot running at proper PTO speed.
BTW, with my 7' wide Pronovost INV-80 blower behind my Ford 5000 (60+hp) crawling at 1.4mph, a foot of snow would be feeding the blower at a rate of just over 14 cubic feet per second. This is approximately half the volume of a pickup truck bed every second.
So, on the really big storms where over a foot is forecast, I do need to do a mid-storm clearing, but typically it's a one and done once the storm is over. What is amazing is that regardless of how much typically falls from 2 - 12 inches, the time it takes to clean up is within 10 minutes. Takes as few as 45 minutes and the longest is just shy of an hour. This is with a 1/4 mile shared drive, 3 houses, and the snowbank cutback on the road.
And, even with the fairly heavy snows we get here in New England, I can throw that roughly 50'. It will also throw any rocks too. Gotta be careful where the chute is aiming. (^_^)
The title of this video fits a lot of things in my life
Haha
I can not agree more about circular driveways. I am a Director of Facilities and at my last school district we had a bus loop at our elementary school that was a circle with curbs and sidewalks around it. So not only do you have to deal with the hassle of trying to catch all of the snow as you plow around curves but you had no where to push it to the side so you have to carry it all out of the circle to stack it. I am a firm believer that any site planner needs to have experience plowing and mowing before being allowed to design parking lots and landscaping I hope everyone has great holiday season coming up
The vocational school I worked at had a circle and I would plow 1/4 of the circle at a time, backing up and plowing straight. We finally got a snowblower on a tractor 😊
Great video, I have used almost every kind of snow removal tools and equipment over the last 50 yrs and that rear mounted blower design I'd say is the best i have seen for some years and that is allot less neck stretching for you as an operator, fortunate for me i no longer need anything that big just a walk behind blower and thats only 6 or 7 times a year 👍
Excellent demonstration. We got hit hard with 3 feet of snow yesterday here south of Buffalo NY. I'm about to go clear snow right now . Never ends lol
I love my 1023e with the snowblower in winter here in New England!
Courtney, that pull type snowblower works great. Enjoyable video. Thanks
Thanks Robert...that blower is one cool snow removal tool.
One advantage of conventional snowblowers (not sure about the inverted ones)is it allows me with my 54 inch MK Martin on the 3 pt hitch of my 1023e to punch above our weight! I can punch through 2 and 3 foot drifts and piles of snow I could never hope to push/plough through!
Great video as always. With regard to fogging inside, i run my kioti with the rear window cracked open up against the opener/window lock, and leave my A/C on . Zero fogging, and i live in canadas far north where it is cold.
Spent three hours clearing wet snow the other day. I've learned my lesson and will wait for sunset (lower temps) moving forward. A bit of wd40 helped move thr snow along.
Awesome!!
Luv your content!
One of the things I do for the fog issue inside my cab is have my heat on, but I crack my rear window open an inch or two. That allows me to turn the heat up a bit more to defog the glass, but it regulates the temp inside the cab so things don't get too warm.
I have done that before too. Sometimes I don’t like the idea of my back window being unsecured. Not sure why.
I set up an intermediate stop on my front window and open it after the cab gets as warm as I want it.
Is there a ‘Fresh Air’ and ‘Recirculation’ settings on those?
@@ToasterrBath i have that option in mine. But it still gets too warm either way, so cracking the rear window open helps keep the cab at a more reasonable temp for me. Though, I do tend to just end up in a hoodie even on the coldest of days, but I take my coat with me, just in case...
most of the snow i deal with is pretty fluffy, but for the early and late season glop, i spray that ceramic automotive coating all over the inside of my blower (don't forget the chute). 1 application early season gets me through a normal year (~800 driveways, ~250" of snow). heavy years i may have to apply again mid season. put it on when it's warmer (or in a warm garage). it just globs up and does nothing if you put it on cold metal
When you go to work, you must feel like a kid in a candy store lol. All of those awesome toys .
In weather like this I see a major need for a cab! I have never dealt with that kind of snow, but with that much driveway I imagine it would be like clearing a big shopping center parking lot.
Keep the AC on in the cab with the vents directed at the windows and you will eliminate or greatly reduce the window fog. I run a 4066R for commercial snow removal and have zero issues with window fog.
@@BradAyres-w5t that’s exactly what I’ve always done
✨️Love a pusher!!✨️
I love my HLA pusher also!
I have a loop in my driveway that only gets used as a parking spot for my neighbor's horse trailer and a few family members. I break it down to a bunch of straight shots pushing the snow a few feet beyond the pavement. Trying to do a continuous curve with a blower or pusher is a little quicker, but it always leaves windrows.
Great video on the snow removal and the use of different types of equipment to solve different issues. I had a 6' Martin Meteor Pull Type Blower and it was an EXCELLENT blower. I had spine surgery last year, and nerve damage resulted and I could not physically get into my JD 4720. I had to downsize and went with a JD 3046R mid pro with a 5' blower on the front. I think I will be happy, but time will tell. Thanks Corey for all the information and help you pass on to all of us.
Bob SWWI
That is a SWEET setup!! 👉💪
Yeah buddy, had a chance to use it again today. You get a bunch your way?
@@GoodWorksTractors forecast was 4-9". Got 1.5"
What a bummer
@@GoodWorksTractors I agree.....almost not enough to plow.....
15:04 Hydrostatic tractors have a big heater directly under the cab. If I plowed more than two hours at a time I needed A/C, even down to zero degrees or below zero in full sun.
You got more than southern MN.
Just got another 6" overnight too. Lovin' it :)
You are starting to look tired. Remember to take care. God bless you.
That's Michigan winters for you, semi-hibernation, haha! I'm feeling great though, eating healthy, daily exercise, and working less than I used to :)
Maybe you could try adding some external mounted 12V fans inside the cab to keep the side windows clear? these get used on RV's and busses to keep their large windows clear.
Perhaps so, wasn't an issue at all today or last night though. Thanks for the idea!
@@GoodWorksTractors I have a kioti NX with an NK Martin 78 inch pull type. The windows fog up sometimes I just turn the AC on and crank the heat up a little higher and it defog the windows right away works great. I love my snowblower I put a piece of 3 inch tubing all the way across the rear to use as a gauge it works a lot better than trying to use the side gauges that came on it.I have a aggregate driveway and those stones always annoy me when they go rattling through the blower that’s why I put the piece of tubing on it bridges all the high and low spots side to side and keeps the blower from digging in you can zip right along with that on there no problem
I have had a circular driveway for over thirty years and have never had any problems blowing snow with my 47" JD Quick Hitch blower on first my 445 and now my 1026R. As for the chute clogging, this is greatly reduced by adding rubber flaps on the end of the fan to remove the clearance between the fan housing and the fan. I seldom clog my chute anymore with this simple modification. A lot of people use old conveyor belting, but I could not find any locally so I used the old side wall from some old tires I have laying around and this had worked fine for many years. After the tires are cut up, the township will collect them in the spring.
I’ve never used a blower that didn’t clog in wet snow. Must be a reason no snowblower manufacturers incorporate it?
I am betting it is for cost considerations they don't do it. I had to drill three holes in each fan blade, make a clamp out of flat stock and drill it to match the fan blade holes and then cut the rubber to fit. Fortunately for me, I just bought a new 47" blower to replace the one I gave to my son along with the old 445. Unfortunately the new blower came with a plastic fan and I had to buy the old steel fan from JD before I ever used the blower. This made it easier to drill the fan and make the strap clamps. I then had to fit the rubber pieces to the housing after I re-assembled the blower and this took a couple of hours getting it right. I would install one flapper and then run the blower to seat the flapper to the housing and then install the next. I used silicone grease on the rubber to keep it from burning and the system works great. I have blown my driveway twice since the Lake Michigan snow machine turned on this season. I will go out again tomorrow to do it for the third time. I am glad I tore the blower apart, I found one of the bearing lock collars not secured properly on the auger shaft and I had that shaft ruined on my original blower I bought in 1995 when the bearing was allowed to spin on the shaft. This also allowed me to Anti-Seize the shaft where it is inserted into the enclosed chain drive case. This has been known to rust the auger gear box/fan shaft to that chain drive box output shaft. While I had the new fan out, I installed a grease fitting to keep it easily greased. JD installs grease fittings on the Augers, just not the fans. Several people have reported the fan rusting to the shaft so hard they could not move it even with the shear bolt removed.
Why not an optional kit then? Snowblowers aren’t cheap to begin with. They are generally the most expensive tool one can buy to remove snow. So folks buying them are already planning on “blowing” a pile of cash. I’m playing devils advocate here. It’s not a new concept and surely every snowblower manufacturer is aware of the mod. They also test the heck out of their designs before market.
I first ran into the flapper mod on the JD forums and there are people on Ebay selling kits and I bought one. It didn't come with rubber pieces with cording between the plys and wore out quickly. After asking questions on the forums, I decided on the rubber sidewalls from my old tires. This greatly reduced the chute clogging when i was blowing snow along side the county road in front of my mail box. It will not stop all blockages, but I now seldom have to unblock the chute, maybe once or twice a season. Well worth the time and effort in my opinion.
Always a fun time removing snow! lol
Sure is!!
How would this type of blower work with 30" of snow like up here in E AURORA NY
Doesn’t really matter the tool, I would never wait for 30” of snow to fall before starting to move it. Tackle it every 4-6” whether with a blower, pusher, or blade.
Done it before! As long as the tractor has clearance to keep moving forward, do a pass with the blower a foot off the ground, then go back and set it on the ground. Unless you keep a conventional blower kicking around for those days and to chew up snowbanks 😂
Dont always have that option
Do they make smaller snow pushers for garden tractors?
Courtney I have a Kubota BX2380 and the first couple of big dumps in the third week of November were heavy wet snow. I have the front mount Commercial Land Pride blower and it handled the 20” of wet snow that had water on the bottom with no issues. I cranked the RPM and moved slower and it threw the snow ok. Not as far as flaky snow but enough to get it away from the driveway. We’ve had over 220cm of snow to date and its lake effect squalling again today with whiteouts all day. Wish I could send you a pic! I only had one plug up and I knew it was coming because the snow/slush was in a pool of water that had drained off a carport roof. I cleared the plug and finished blowing that mess away! So far with the colder weather wet snow shouldn’t be an issue. I’ve cleared the snow off my roof 4 times to date and our streets in the Soo, Ontario are down to one lane off the main roads! Looking outside right now I can barely see the houses across the street. I clear out 4 driveways with the little BX2380. I make sure that when I’m done I clean as much of the snow off the tractor and the blower before I park it in the garage and it gets plugged into an oil pan heater and battery minder. I’ve used over 7 gallons of diesel so far and it’ll be more if the squalls let up tonight. The great thing about a blower is you aren’t left with huge piles of snow and don’t have to plow a long way off the driveway like you would with a snow pusher. Enjoy your TH-cam feed and yup you can’t beat a heated cab😁
Holy smokes, sounds like you guys are full on winter! Awesome, hope we have a real winter here this year. Thanks for update!
Turn the ac on and temp to hot. Will get rid of almost all fogging.
Courtney, I would try very hard to look around a find someone with an 80” cyclone near you and do a side by side. I was just watching, as it pertains to the clogging issue. I think that issue your having is more MK Martin, I go through some nasty stuff with my cyclone. Does it plug at times. Yes, but it’s always my fault. And the circumstances that are causing yours to plug aren’t an issue with the cyclone.
What are the negatives of TYM tractors/Branson?
Hey Courtney, thank you for your videos. They are a great source of info. Looking for your opinion on a snow pusher. I own a Kioti DK4710se cab tractor and have settled on a HLA 1800 series. Just trying to decide if I should get 6' or 7'. I think that's a 7' on your DK? Any times you wish you had a 6' instead?
Howdy, I think either size would be fine. It's more about having enough weight on the back for traction to push. I had originally thought the 84" would be pushing the limits, but now on my second year, I don't even think about it. Only downside is my pusher is wider than my rear blower. I have to pay more attention when backing up by objects as it's easy to think I'm in the clear once my blower goes by. However, my pusher sticks out further to the side. Hope that makes sense.
@@GoodWorksTractors Thank you. That is one of my main concerns. I sometimes use the blower on a winding wood road and could see me hooking a tree with the back of the 7' pusher while going backwards, or worse the side of my house/shop. While it would be nice to have the extra width while pushing which would keep the tractor further from side objects, I think I will stick to the 6' and make the extra couple of passes. Thanks again and keep up the great work.
would never own a snow blower on the back of the tractor like this.
I’m not sure I understand why you would leave a comment like that? What is anyone supposed to do with that information?
Have you tried using curb markers
Same new blower here with no weights added, 1325' gravel driveway. Picked up zero stone, I don't see the need for them. Just my takes.
I could also have picked up zero stone if I would have raised it slightly higher. Thanks for watching.
You can try spray on Turtle wax or silicone spray on the internals of the snowblower, it should help prevent wet snow from sticking
Thank you sir. I did try something similar several years ago. Not positive how much it helped prior to it wearing off.
@@GoodWorksTractorsDupont also sells a spray on snow and ice repellant that snowblower folks like to use. I haven’t tried it, yet but it gets excellent reviews.
@ I feel like that’s the one I tried. It’s on a video of mine, I just would have to search them all to find it haha.
Last winter I seen My neighbor's son chucking snow into the street with a snow shovel I told him to stop it because it was illegal.
circular drive a LOT easier with a conventional angle plow.. Just wind-row the snow either in or out by just driving in circles. Done many on residential and commercial jobs
wonder how the snowblower would do in 2 plus feet of snow?
You need a "Heated Driveway" in the circle area.....
Haha...maybe a giant blow torch?
@GoodWorksTractors I mean, if NASCAR can do it, surely Good Works can bring us the "homeowner" version to keep the track clean! 🙏
Before you were a gleam in your father's eye there were pull behind snow glowers.
MK Martin just released this new version of their pull-type this year. That's the brand new blower design we're talking about. 👍
Agreed circle drive not fun to remove snow
Put snow skis on the blowers - you know better!
Use a shovel.
I see more issues than benefits.
I have no use for rear mounted snow blowers.
Well good thing you let us know haha
worthless when you get several feet deep snow
Sure, but why would you wait for several feet of snow to fall before removing it?
well I can certainly see that you don't live in Minnesota when a blizzard goes through that dumps 2' of snow you have drifts that are 8' high or higher that wannabe thing isn't going to do nothing that's why I have a blower on the front of the payloader i have a blower on the 1025r for small snows only thing wrong is you have to twist your head around to blow it loader on front for scaling ice and blower in back blow snow you can atleast blow drifts 4' high
Had hard time watching video, your voice was speeded up so fast hard to listen to
That’s a playback speed setting on your device. My voice was not sped up and if anything I spoke slower in this video compared to normal. You can slow it down or speed it up with the controls.
9 minutes; now you know why I took my M-K Martin front mount snow blower off and haven't used it in 4 years. I strictly use the front bucket and back blade to clear snow.
2 'If' here; (1) If you put snow on the road, You can be charged if there is an accident.
(2) If you are charged you WILL end up with the bills from the accident.
I love my 1023e with the snowblower in winter here in New England!