Originally Posted By: Oil Changer
Originally Posted By: MNgopher
Sure, plow/snowblow downhill. What happens when you need to go back up so you can plow/blow downhill again? Will you be able to make it back up the hill?
Our lawn tractors (one is an old Montgomery Wards model, if that dates it at all) both require chains for virtaully any traction in snow conditions. The turf tires just don't cut it in the cold and snow conditions alone. That being said, I'm not worried about surface damage as they are used on a gravel surface.
It's a driveway. Not a hill. Not Mt. Everest.
Let some more air out of the tires if need be.
The proper way to handle this situation for both man and machine is to let gravity work for you.
Drive or back up the drive. Do it in halves if it makes you feel better.
Plowing/blowing uphill is dumb. There is no reason to do it.
You obviously have a very small driveway or burn about 1/2 tank of gas just backing up. If a tractor can pull heavy loads, pushing a snowblower (which is less taxing on the driveline than pushing a plow) will be easy. I've used a few garden tractors with snow blowers. Even with the "tractor lug" type tires there is no comparison to chains. Just go slow and you won't rip up the driveway. I currently snowblow with a John Deere G110 and 42" 2 stage blower. Great setup and runs circles around the old Toro walk behind blower we had. That 18 hp will surely throw some snow.
Originally Posted By: MNgopher
Sure, plow/snowblow downhill. What happens when you need to go back up so you can plow/blow downhill again? Will you be able to make it back up the hill?
Our lawn tractors (one is an old Montgomery Wards model, if that dates it at all) both require chains for virtaully any traction in snow conditions. The turf tires just don't cut it in the cold and snow conditions alone. That being said, I'm not worried about surface damage as they are used on a gravel surface.
It's a driveway. Not a hill. Not Mt. Everest.
Let some more air out of the tires if need be.
The proper way to handle this situation for both man and machine is to let gravity work for you.
Drive or back up the drive. Do it in halves if it makes you feel better.
Plowing/blowing uphill is dumb. There is no reason to do it.
You obviously have a very small driveway or burn about 1/2 tank of gas just backing up. If a tractor can pull heavy loads, pushing a snowblower (which is less taxing on the driveline than pushing a plow) will be easy. I've used a few garden tractors with snow blowers. Even with the "tractor lug" type tires there is no comparison to chains. Just go slow and you won't rip up the driveway. I currently snowblow with a John Deere G110 and 42" 2 stage blower. Great setup and runs circles around the old Toro walk behind blower we had. That 18 hp will surely throw some snow.