I am so happy to find more and more Canadian content. Using a tractor in the southern states doesn’t provide much information for me. I am waiting on the delivery of my NX4510 Cab HST. We decided just tonight to go with a pull behind blower rather than a front mount. One of our concerns was the driving over virgin snow and compressing it prior to the blower. Having seen the size of the pull behind blower today, I have no doubt it will scrape down as far as I let it to remove tire tracks. Thanks for your information.
informative video. what the brand was on the inverted snowblower or how wide was the blower? I am assuming your tractor is 35hp, guessing at that number from the model number of the tractor.
Just curious, why would you be going through more shear pins with an inverted blower than a rear blower? I don't know either, I'm wondering why people would say that. Probably buying one in the next week or two so, would love your feedback.
Can’t see or understand how this would work in New England? We get a lot of snow and it often is wet. On asphalt with downward hydraulics I’m sure it’s fine, but on gravel, guessing you would be shooting rocks into the woods until the ground freezes.
I figure the comment about blowing shear pins was someone that advocated just throwing a plow at your tractor. I’ve been running inverted blowers for several years and I don’t blow many pins at all
@Fred Wills yea, if it’s maintained it tends to be good. Obviously if there are rocks it could present an issue. I have caught some 5” cobbles and sent them through, because I wasn’t aware they were where I found them. I didn’t blow pins, but if I fought it different I could have.
I am so happy to find more and more Canadian content. Using a tractor in the southern states doesn’t provide much information for me. I am waiting on the delivery of my NX4510 Cab HST. We decided just tonight to go with a pull behind blower rather than a front mount. One of our concerns was the driving over virgin snow and compressing it prior to the blower. Having seen the size of the pull behind blower today, I have no doubt it will scrape down as far as I let it to remove tire tracks. Thanks for your information.
American or Canadian, there's not a big difference. It's always english langage. Kioti's tractors look well.
Looks like it works great!
Wonderful video....thank u
informative video.
what the brand was on the inverted snowblower or how wide was the blower? I am assuming your tractor is 35hp, guessing at that number from the model number of the tractor.
It's call an Upshot
Just curious, why would you be going through more shear pins with an inverted blower than a rear blower? I don't know either, I'm wondering why people would say that. Probably buying one in the next week or two so, would love your feedback.
What is the make and width of your blower. I have the same tractor. Thanks
Can’t see or understand how this would work in New England? We get a lot of snow and it often is wet. On asphalt with downward hydraulics I’m sure it’s fine, but on gravel, guessing you would be shooting rocks into the woods until the ground freezes.
I figure the comment about blowing shear pins was someone that advocated just throwing a plow at your tractor.
I’ve been running inverted blowers for several years and I don’t blow many pins at all
@Fred Wills yea, if it’s maintained it tends to be good. Obviously if there are rocks it could present an issue.
I have caught some 5” cobbles and sent them through, because I wasn’t aware they were where I found them. I didn’t blow pins, but if I fought it different I could have.
I have a Kioti 2610..I live on a gravel road . Sounds like some rocks and gravel in there..no issues with smaller rocks and such?
Can you tell me the make, model and which company you bought this snowblower from. Thank you
How wide is that blower
what was the cost difference between front and rear blowers?
One could spend between 5-15k on a front mount blower. All dependent on what tractor they had.