Question about snowblowers
#1
Thread Starter
Slob










Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 6,345
From: Ottineau











Clearance.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
#2
Clearance.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
#3
Clearance.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
My new one basically has the scraper blade at ground level. That can't be right.
How much to raise it? An eighth? A quarter? The manual doesn't say but I can obviously bugger around with it. It'll be on asphalt. No gravel.
I'd like to get this right before I mutilate a nipple or two.
#5
I must confess I've been googling for the news headline "Gatineau, homme, blessures, mamelons, freak, souffleuse, accident"
#7
Thread Starter
Slob










Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 6,345
From: Ottineau











Got it.
I'll stick the thing on some 1/8 plywood and loosen various bolts before re-tighting them.
Having the scraper scrape that close didn't make sense.
I'll stick the thing on some 1/8 plywood and loosen various bolts before re-tighting them.
Having the scraper scrape that close didn't make sense.
#9
BE user by choice









Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 4,854
From: A Briton, married to a Canadian, now in Fredericton.











My request this year on Christmas Day was that "next Christmas We have a snowblower that I can understand and handle". A number of you have held back whilst I decided that I needed to change the NB winter, and faced it with tools that were not up to the job!
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move...I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move...I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
Last edited by MillieF; Jan 7th 2017 at 1:53 pm.
#10
My request this year on Christmas Day was that "next Christmas We have a snowblower that I can understand and handle". A number of you have held back whilst I decided that I needed to change the NB winter, and faced it with tools that were not up to the job!
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move it..I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move it..I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
#11
(I am in the north of York region, ON so asi understand it, not as much snow as Millie)
Last edited by Teaandtoday5; Jan 7th 2017 at 2:14 pm.
#12
BE user by choice









Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 4,854
From: A Briton, married to a Canadian, now in Fredericton.












We have various mowers, including a drive on one that Forest Gump had? It's red and iconic, apparently...lucky me
#14
We are thinking about one of these. We are entering our third winter in this house, struggling by with just shovels but my back is getting a bit old for that, and the kids are starting to move out/get better paying jobs. So far this winter my shovelled snow bank (iceberg) is in front of the tent the lawnmower is in. Our drive is about 30m, with a slope upwards towards the road, so my minivan struggles very quickly once it snows.
(I am in the north of York region, ON so asi understand it, not as much snow as Millie)
(I am in the north of York region, ON so asi understand it, not as much snow as Millie)
http://forums2.gardenweb.com/discussions/1618341/buying-lawn-tractor-snow-blower
I have a lot of grass to take care of in the summer months and my tractor gets worked pretty hard, its more expensive than a blower so I like to winterize it and store it for the winter, fully maintained. One thing I would add is the need to use stabilised gas in your stored lawn tractor/blower due to so much ethanol in gas these days. Failure to do so is likely to cause carburetor/fuel line problems down the road due the gas having 'gone off' so to speak over the storage period. Only a week ago I had to fix a neighbours snow blower due to this problem. Carb strip down and clean solved the problem, an expensive and inconvenient scenario if you have to put your blower/lawn tractor into a small engine repair shop to be fixed.
Last edited by macadian; Jan 8th 2017 at 12:36 am.
#15
My request this year on Christmas Day was that "next Christmas We have a snowblower that I can understand and handle". A number of you have held back whilst I decided that I needed to change the NB winter, and faced it with tools that were not up to the job!
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move...I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
Many thanks, I applaud and appreciate your patience!
Now we have a huge thing that I can't move or start. I want one of those that has tracks on either side like a tank, but I need it small enough that I can move...I am short and light...learning to get to grips with this stuff is the secret to overcoming the bloody thing
Snowblowers 101 would be a great thread for the future! the snow falls just as heavily in my garden (regrettably) as it does in the man next door's ...but I am not as equipped as I'd like to be to deal with it.
Not cheap but easier to manoeuvre I think.



