You forgot to rank "Fun". Blower wins the fun category, especially in deep snow. Just don't let the wife know any of this is fun. It's all "hard work and sacrifice".
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
I was trying to come up with 18 things for a golf score card. That would have been a good one. Blower FTW indeed!
@franktouchatout58532 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@misterl28752 жыл бұрын
Western New York (Buffalo area). No competition!! Blower is the no-brained!!
@thresh9606 Жыл бұрын
i disagree sure its cool to watch it eat through the snow but plowing is so much more fun for me. just my opinion though
@xephael3485 Жыл бұрын
Nothing about snowblowers is fun if you hit something
@marktersigni16472 жыл бұрын
The real winner is you! Convincing your family to clear the drive for you!!! Genius!
@oceanlover16632 жыл бұрын
I like how you listen to your fans and try different methods. That make you more trustworthy of testing equipments.
@CW11162 жыл бұрын
That looked like a fun race for your bro and dad. I have been plowing my driveway, sidewalks and parking areas (lots of variation there) in central Minnesota for 26 years now. First with a 3/4T pickup - extremely easy and obviously warm and comfortable - then 8 years ago I bought a compact Kubota L3901 tractor/loader/bucket combo. That worked well but took 2-3 times longer and I got quite cold when the temp dropped to -10 or colder. This past fall I bought an old snow plow with no hydraulics (manual angling) that I use with my forks. This is almost as fast as my 3/4T pickup used to be and I don't get as cold as when using the bucket because I'm only plowing for 2/3 the time. P.S. I plow 2/3 gravel an 1/3 concrete. I drive over the 1st couple of smaller snowfalls to pack the snow and it turns into an extremely smooth, concrete-like driveway for the rest of the year... until late March/April, e.g. At that point I add a few washers to my plow shoes and away I go. A snowblower is just too expensive, a pain to install and has lots of moving parts to go wrong just when you need it the most. BTW - I plow (on average) 10 times per year with amounts ranging from 3" to 12". Once every 2-3 years mother nature has to prove her superiority and dump 20"+ on me. ha
@Justindobb19842 жыл бұрын
I live in New Brunswick Canada and use a walk behind snow blower, so not the same but the bases are there. At times, we can get a storm every week or 2 on average. I have done an impeller mod to zero out the clearance on the throwing impeller (use some rubber / tire side wall). I can throw complete slash let alone wet heavy snow so don't think it can't be done. After the mod, the snow is thrown further as well since you're basically extending the impeller blades and in doing so increase the speed at the furthest tip. Thanks for the great video, I think people will get some value out of it
@russorpcom2 жыл бұрын
I am lucky to have a pusher, backblade and snowblower. The issue with each of them is conditions, mainly ground not froze on gravel driveway. I interchange as conditions allow (again lucky that I can). I do agree with your assessment. This was another well thought out video. Thanks for posting!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Richard. I hope that most folks will agree but all situations are so different. When the conditions are right I always find myself going for the blower and cab. That's the one that my brother always uses too :)
@rv-eb3wu2 жыл бұрын
for your application you are absolutely correct, in my situation I load a lot of hay into livestock using my pallet forks so I made sockets on a snowplow that I can simply drive into and throw a chain on. It is half the width of my laneway so after feeding hay I can drive out and back and have lane done then go and put a pallet of wood into my outdoor woodstove room and I am done. Obviously this only works for me so everybody has their own best way.
@Hp2G12 жыл бұрын
Great video. I am from up-north, and a blower is a must for heavy snowfall. Last winter my tractor was broken, and I had to survive with only an ATV and a blade. A friend had to come help me with his snowblower, because the blade could not push snow pass the snowbanks after a few snowfall. But for small snowfall, a blade is much faster. In fact those two are complementary. I usually push the snow in piles that I blows at the end. This is why I have a front mounted snow blade on my John Deere 855, and a snowblower on the 3 points in the back. I used to clear snow with a skid-steer, but it was a long process (but fun). Loose gravel is only an issue in early winter. One the driveway is frozen, the bottom is rock solid. To conclude, if I had to chose only one implement, it would definitely be the snowblower. Thanks for sharing
@markheiman15502 жыл бұрын
I have all three for my tractor. Living in Michigan, we tend to get more snow than Indiana. So I prefer a snowblower over the others. I made a pusher box attachment for my loader last fall, but haven't tried it out yet.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Perfect!
@michaelwood72532 жыл бұрын
I too live in Michigan, but I use a Kubota BX1870 with a FEL and a rear blade to clear my driveway at my place.
@randalmiddleton80682 жыл бұрын
Haven't got my snowblower yet, but agree that having all three is great if agreeable by the wifey...
@aaronwillett8202 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@snoozieq45842 жыл бұрын
YES!! I love snow blowers!!! Dad would blow the snow into the yard in Hampstead, MD, where my brother and I designated our snow forts, there was walkway in between, and we would build our forts facing each other and have a blast. Grandpa Meinke had a blower attachment for his JD, don't ask me which model, and he would clear the cul-de-sac, neighbors parking pads and the long drive every winter in Conneaut, OH. He never took money for clearing the snow. Grandpa was that kind of guy, just neighborly. He did receive the occasional five gallon gas can filled to the brim in the summer and winter from the neighbors though. Thank you for this video and the memories it brings to the forefront 💖💖🥰🥰💖💖 I especially love the ending when you built the snow pile for the girls to sled on! Happy Valentine's Day! 💝💝
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Susan. My girls love playing in the snow. I think they get it naturally. Snow days are always great for making memories... and HOT chocolate :)
@sloeryd Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I am sitting here in central Florida watching your very refreshing video where it is a sweltering 97 degrees outside.
@sharonfieber6458 Жыл бұрын
Ground snow drifting on side ridges. Blade move lots of snow, but snow ridges to block with snow drifting. Loader space snow piles, ground drifting deeper snow drifts. Blower through snow distance, ground drifting to snow depth. Prairie snow issues. Great effort build scorecard, thank you.
@allaboutperspective650 Жыл бұрын
Thank your dad for the Laugh, I live just above the arctic circle and most people use a blower here.
@bobnarrus32182 жыл бұрын
I went back and fourth before eventually settling on the blade! Your commentary is spot on, each method has it's advantages and disadvantages. It is a sizeable investment and if you do not get a lot of snow the loader is just fine. I have a 1025R with a Frontier 60 inch plow and about 600 lbs. of ballast. It has no traction problems whatsoever, in fact I've never taken the chains out of the box. My 1025R would run rings around the plow you used. That said, the disadvantages are; the blade is not tall; anything over 12 to 15 inches of snow could be a problem. The blade does not lift very high off the ground, so stacking can be an issue. It is not John Deere Quick Attach, it takes a few minutes to get the bucket back on; which is important if you want to stack or re-locate snow. The good side is; it is quick and nimble. Love your analysis, it is very helpful to someone considering this type of investment. Keep up the great work and best of luck to you!! Thank you!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Bob! Great feedback.
@rodbagley16862 жыл бұрын
I have the 1025r with the 60in frontier loader mounted blade. Can pile snow 5 to 6 feet high no problem. But on gravel it is a pain. Need to adjust the tilt of the blade often.
@littleblue4x42 жыл бұрын
Great video as always Neil. Good conclusions in moderate snow. 15" storms would convince everyone the blower is best, but the correct answer to your question is to have multiple tractors and not have to change attachments. Thank you
@deanbarr57402 жыл бұрын
Hafta agree with you Neil. I've used all three implements and made the choice to stick with the loader. It's the best choice for me. I opted to sale my 750 J.D. with the front hydraulic blade. Of course here in W.Virginia we normally have pretty mild winters. So I kept my loader tractor and rear 3 point scraper blade. Suits me fine. You did a great comparison here bud, and I'm sure everyone has their own opinions.
@timheyboer47862 жыл бұрын
A snow blower is a lot of fun, IF you get enough snow. This year at my dad's farm I'm using a 12' blade on a 225hp cab tractor. That makes snow removal fun and quick.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
OH yeah!!
@Jonnysjunkgarage2 жыл бұрын
Great video! Totally agree. I’ve done the same comparisons with my Case 646,446 with blower and 442 with blade over the past years. This year I have only kept the 446 with blower and newly installed cab out of cold storage.
@DrummerZoot2 жыл бұрын
The most fun was seeing you and your girls enjoying the huge snow pile! Great video, Neil.
@mosfet500 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, great fun! Okay, I live in the Catskill mountains, we get everything here from wet to a couple of feet and more - 600 foot plus driveway. My JD 3320 takes about 20 to 30 minutes the most to change from the bucket to the blower. Yes, I use a blower. I've tried with the bucket and it just digs the driveway to bits and is horrible in wet snow. In wet snow I wait till it gets cold then it's easier to move with the front blower which is my absolute first choice for speed, neatness and let's not forget as the season goes on blades run out of places to push snow especially when you're building up four and five foot banks of it! You have to take that into account, the first snow with the blade is easier and quicker then in Feb and March.
@ArmoredXJ2 жыл бұрын
Great explanation and great scores. And accurate as well I would say. I think the biggest consideration to have in this comparison is the size and type of the tractor. At my friends farm we use a JD 4320 with stock loader on the front and a Rear Mounted PTO to clear the farm and neighboring drives (friend and family). Combo works awesome. And snowblower hook up doesn’t take long, usually out it on before the first “big” snow fall and leave it on unless we need to swap it out. Heavy wet snow can cause a lot of clogs and shear pin failures. All in all it does a great job though, what we can’t do with the blower we use the bucket for. And most of the stuff we need in winter swaps out with the bucket (forks being number 1). I look forward to next years race with the back hoe vs the compact tractor ha ha ha!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Great points Stephen. Size does make a big difference. I wouldn't use the little garden tractors on this driveway.
@doobs462 жыл бұрын
@@digdrivediy A little garden tractor with a snowblower can move a lot of snow for it's size. Way better than a walk behind snowblower or shovel.
@ianherz60022 жыл бұрын
I do have to say using an 8 ft blade on a 4020 is a lot different than a 5 ft blade on a 2305 or a newer 1025r
@brisynmcdonald20262 жыл бұрын
Agreed I am from Ontario - for deep and drifted snow the blower is hands down the best option - And a cab and a heater is the way to go - Too expensive to buy so I made my own - now I look forward to snow days - great videos
@ralphparry4609 ай бұрын
Gerat video. I started moving snow with a bucket, then used a blade for yrs and finally went to a front end blower and I totally agree with everything you said. Along with the front end snow blower I put a "box" type blade on the back so I could back drag. I do a number of the neighbours driveways and a couple of them have some pretty tight areas or large planting circles and other obstructions in the middle of their driveways where there is no where to push the snow and all of them have garages which require back dragging. The other thing that your "test" didn't include was with a blade or bucket, you have to push that snow across the road or pick it up with a bucket and dump it on your lawn. Anyway, good job.
@bluegrallis2 жыл бұрын
I have a home made straight blade on the loader of my old tractor and a rear blade for extra ballast and clean up. It worked great for years and I could even pile snow up well with the front blade. The tractor just sets in the shed most of the time now, because the neighbor I help with field work, comes by with his heated cab skid loader and opens the drive up for me while I look out the window! 😎😁
@mikeludwig43152 жыл бұрын
I'm in NE Ohio and own a Bx23S and use front blower with grader blade on 3 point. Light snows just use blade, deeper with the blower or to clean up piles. I had a plow for my truck and hard to store and still had to move piles back in my small area. My blower switch over to winter mode only takes me about a 1.5 hours. Other advantage of a blower is the ability to follow curves on the driveway also, no pushing of the front end. Great video and scorecard
@jacobm14782 жыл бұрын
Great information to help others decide which option will be best for their situation. My location is in northern Wisconsin where large snowfalls are common as well as getting a few inches at a time. I chose to go with the rear snowblower as well as having the snow pusher on my loader. This setup provides great weight distribution as well as versatility for varying conditions. My driveways are all gravel as well. Thanks for sharing!
@benjaminhuberty5888 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your time. Trying to find what best to invest in. Something to mow in the summer n move snow in the winter. This was the most info in a video I can find so far. Thank you!
@digdrivediy Жыл бұрын
Good luck!
@FeralPreacher2 жыл бұрын
Having lived in NJ, MA, and MN I am so happy to not to need any kind of cloud dandruff removal here in TX. For the 2 days a year that we get a light snow it is easy to take off and just hibernate while looking at the whitness. Thanks for sharing.
@henrycarlson75142 жыл бұрын
Thank You , I personally use an 855 with loader and snow blower on the back , the only bad thing is looking backward. In my opinion any choice is a compromise, blowers are great if you have room, loader can make placed piles . What I want is a Bi Drive with a blower on one end and a big loader on the other , to bad they are so hard to find , expensive and big . I did like the pile that you made with the backhoe.
@andrewt9204 Жыл бұрын
I agree with your assessment here. Living in MN, it's definitely a blower for me. I thought about a blade for the wheeler, but I didn't want to deal with managing piles. I like the idea of seeing if you can get a snow bucket for the front end loader and see how that does!
@suddenlysolo21702 жыл бұрын
I've used all 3 - on the same day. I'd add one more attachment - a sweeper. While the others will get accumulated snow off, a sweeper will take it down to bare pavement.
@mwhite19782 жыл бұрын
Great video. I live in KY and rarely have to remove snow. Use the blade on the front of my utv to clear my 1900’ driveway and love it.
@cmarkchappelle7117 Жыл бұрын
That made me smile, especially the end when your girls were having so much fun!
@digdrivediy Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@nathankoch99702 жыл бұрын
After watching the video it may be worth mentioning the skill and efficiency that the operator of the snow blade showed probably made the race much closer than it ever should have been and may have skewed the results. Again, just my opinion.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Oh yes. Much skills. Many talented. 😂
@MrBwinslow Жыл бұрын
I agree. Just my opinion but after many years with the snow blade it usually takes me one good snow a year to get back into the swing of using the blade. Once I do I can move a lot of snow faster during the normal light to moderate snows with the blade than the blower. If we get a LOT of snow, 12 inches or more, that's where the snow blower shines.
@cwolf8841 Жыл бұрын
It all depends (ignoring cost) on what kind of snow you get and how much plowing (miles and width). For me, we get wet snow and I have to plow 2-3 miles of road. A blower is generally narrower and wet snow will freeze in the ejection tube. Worse if it’s windy and you’re in the open, then you get ice blasted. I added Artillian wings on my blade so I only had to make 2 passes. With a blower I had to make 4 passes ….. and passes equals time freezing your fingers and toes. And there are things in the road you can hit. Snow pushers? There are folks who love them. In my experience with my snow the snow just flows around the pusher. So there is no absolute answer….. just a situationally dependent answer.
@digdrivediy Жыл бұрын
Exactly right. Good points. Thanks for watching!
@wkualum31942 жыл бұрын
Good one Neil! I have a 7ft pusher box on my Kubota B2601. Love it. It's actually an Ebling rear drag blade from a truck that was totaled out. I bought it for $100 and welded on a skid steer QA and off I go. I can change out to my pallet forks or bucket in 2-3 minutes. Cheers. Love the Videos as always.
@CaptainKleeman2 жыл бұрын
For what we get here, I run the loader down the mile lane one time on each tire path. What stays in the middle or rolls off the edge stays there. I spent my money on AWD. I fully expect a PTO blower on the back and a blower on the front to maximize production for next year's race. (Because that makes financial sense) Awesome sequel to the first comparison, can't wait for next year's!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
These snow plowing races are starting to get expensive!
@powderhousewood Жыл бұрын
That’s was great! What a fun time testing equipment, and I agree a blower is the way to go for serious snow.
@Brette_Caldwell2 жыл бұрын
Best solution is to have multiple tractors with each attachment for different situations. Our that's how I think. Thanks for the videos always interesting to watch! 🤠👍
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Great thinking Brette!
@grattonland2 жыл бұрын
Great comparison and I like how you highlighted the pros and cons of each. My preference is snowblower all the way. Not because it's faster, but for versatility and nicer finished results. I can open my driveway the exact same size every time, with a plow or bucket, the driveway shrinks every storm. Also where I live, the snow banks by the road are too high for a blade, but fine for loader or blower. My snowblower is mounted on the 3 point hitch, so I can still keep my loader in the front, so I do use the bucket for backblading in front of the garage or if I have to move slush. Adding rubber strips on the fins of the impeller does help with wet and slushy snow on the snowblower though. You are right that the blower is the most expensive and harder to install, however a rear blower is cheaper than a front blower because it requires less parts, and also easier to install.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Great summary!
@TheWeekendMedic2 жыл бұрын
I have both a snowthrower (single stage) and a blade on my 355D (and I dream of one day owning a 755). On my uneven gravel driveway the blade is worthless, especially if there is ice underneath that isn't smooth. The snowthrower is a champ - if my chained and weighted tractor can get there, the thrower will clear the snow - even if the drifts are well above the height of the thrower box (as often happens in upstate NY). Love these videos, and still watching for my 755... someday....
@slowride552 жыл бұрын
They’re all better than a shovel!! I was impressed with TTWT’s new video showing moving snow with edge tamers on the bucket. I have a Kubota L3010 with a loader and 7ft rear blade. I push all my snow in reverse using the back side of the blade. This is the only way I have found to push the snow without tearing out all of my gravel.
@andyeder86662 жыл бұрын
If you get frequent snowfalls like we do here in MN I prefer to own/use 2 Deere tractors. One has the snowblower attachment for the heavier snow, it's hard to beat the speed and distance it moves it away from the drive and parking areas. A second tractor with a loader(better yet with a snow pusher or blade) for the lighter snowfall cleanups that blowers don't always due well and for the ease of swapping out to pallet forks for doing other non snow related chores in the winter like lifting logs and pallets stacked with splits for firewood work or unloading heavy items from trucks/trailers. It can be done with one tractor but it takes to much time to swap out snowblower to loader and back and forth thru out the season for my preference. Great video, appreciate all the time you took to show/document the 3 options.
@danb371 Жыл бұрын
This was fun to watch. I own a large tracked skid steer and have been doing multiple rural driveways and about a mile of road from my house. I started with a bucket then moved to a 6 way dozer blade for multi season use and just purchased a snowblower for most of the same reasons you outlined in the video. There are so many different situations that no one tool can be perfect at all of it. The biggest difference for me is that unlike your snowblower mine goes on in the same amount of time as hooking up the blade. I wish the ground I was working on was anywhere close to as flat as yours as that seems to be my biggest problem, high spots and ruts.
@maytham2362 жыл бұрын
Never seen snow in my life, so will not judge your methods but I’m sure that a lot of efforts put in this video, thanks and keep the good work.
@Jackdelfranco682 жыл бұрын
Well done overall. It's tough to be totally objective. And the best part was watching the kids enjoy the snow pile!
@Hilltopangler2 жыл бұрын
I think you hit it on the head with results/situations will vary. I've used all three. I think all three have a place given the proper setup. Here in northern PA we get a surprising amount of wet snow especially near the highway where the salt soaks into the plows spoils in my driveway. I've used all 3 on my current property and the snowblower was awesome when it worked and didn't constantly plug. The plow did okay except I would run out of room to push it back far enough. The winner for me has been the loader for 2 seasons now. I cam pile it up or pick it up and move it without too much trouble. I like the race you did and thought it made for a fun video.
@MudderMilitia Жыл бұрын
Great video. I'm a maintenance mechanic for a school district near Chicago. We have two John deere 1025r compact tractors. We have front mounted blower, blade, and rotary broom. We primarily use it for sidewalks but I do some blacktop playground areas as well. I've not needed to use the blower yet. The blade has been my favorite but the broom does quite well too. We have a rear blade on order this year. I'm eager to see how that works in combination with the broom up front.
@paulmontalto6287 Жыл бұрын
Great video. My experience gives the blower the winner AND the PADDLE blower tops for wet snow and slush. My 150’ x 40’ driveway is locked in with a stone wall on one side and 10’ high railroad tie wall on the other. I’ve cleared blizzard snow here in upstate NY for the last 48 yrs and still get calls from bladders to blow them out.
@digdrivediy Жыл бұрын
Right on
@TractorHoarders2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video and comparison, Neil! I'm a snow plow guy myself (but own a loader, plow, blower, and broom for my tractor), but as you mentioned, conditions are different for everyone. I like not choosing and just getting them all!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@JMAWWorks2 жыл бұрын
Very good evaluation, and fun too. It’s sort of a shame that JD doesn’t have this type of video to help customers evaluate and see the comparisons that matter to their situations. I remember ages ago using a lawn tractor to “race” a ZTR mower and could see directly that despite the straightline parity and increased width, he kept gaining based on maneuverability every pass. I’m sure this video will get lots of views every fall as new folks make this decision themselves.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Hey Jeremy! Great to see you on here! (I think this is the Jeremy I know?) That's a great idea with the lawn mower racing. That would be nice follow up for me for this summer! I hope you're right and that people find this video helpful in the fall when they start thinking about the winter snow wars. Thanks so much for watching and for the comment.
@JMAWWorks2 жыл бұрын
@@digdrivediy Yeah mom shared one of your videos and was nice to find you over here, you are doing some good stuff and look like you are having fun too
@johnpatterson42722 жыл бұрын
Real American ingenuity, thank you. The snowblower is ideal when there is an immediate area to blow the snow in rather tight spaces. I wish I had a snowblade for my farm lane as I can't use a snowblower for a packed gravel roadway. Your Dad used the right move. Next time let's see some snow removal with Buffalo-style snow.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see some buffalo style snow here. Will that happens? You'll see some backhoe style snow removal probably!
@daimonlambert76202 жыл бұрын
Hate to a stick in the snow but, one the tractor with the blower can used the turf tires its not pushing anything just rolling in behind the blower, the tractors with loader and blade need an AG style tires so they can get better traction, and like you said at end of video a blade on the bucket arms or one of those snow scoop things are the best if they you can angle them, along with the backblade, you back up in you tight places drop the backblade pull forward the same time as your plowing with the front, don't know if anyone else commented this, but with a buck or a plow you ( I as the way I was taught) always start in the middle and work out to the sides less snow pell off to clean up. For the snow plow, I've always found the a 2-3 inch clearance is good for stone or dirt driveways, with the backblade picking up the rest, but I agree with you if you can afford a snowblower use it as long as you have a place to blow it to, if not then you're stuck pushing it somewhere.
@kimking88132 жыл бұрын
Neil, I used to live near you in Markle In. Many years cleaning good size drive with x-485 all wheel steer and blade. Assestically very pleasing and never to many problems. Have since moved to Michigan still enjoy the blade, but have bought a new 47 inch blower for the big snows. Haven’t used the blower yet and will use the blade until I just can’t. Keeping that pretty yellow paint new as long as possible.
@casycasy51992 жыл бұрын
i agree 100% with what you scored.i have a 84 inch front mount snow blower .it costs a lot hard to put on ,but i cant live without it.last year 37 in snow storm with drifts over 5 ft the only thing that worked was my snow blower.no pickup truck could do any of the drive ways in my area.i made a killing.meaning i did all my neighbors for free.i also have a front blade on my rtv900 which i use on small amount of snow.this year we had a snow fall the was very wet and my blower did great.i have over a 600 foot drive way on top of a mountain with very strong winds.i just picked ups rear blade for the tractor for next year to see if that will be better then the rtv.the best thing about the snowblower is i can put snow where i want and the grandkids make great igloos .
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
That sounds awesome Ron. I like that you made a killing "doing it for free" :) You've given me something to shoot for as I would like nothing more than to be stranded home from work and just drive around blowing snow with a massive blower from the comfort of a heated cab!!
@georgvonsauer2618 Жыл бұрын
I have a rear mounted snow blower and works well with dry powder snow, but clogs with wet heavy snow...under ideal conditions it works faster than my bucket and pull blade...my tractor is chained up for traction...good video...
@ganoncollins12 жыл бұрын
Great vid, I started out with a compact with a 48" blade. With time, results looked ok, but the key is "with time", then I went to a compact with a loader 48" bucket, a little faster but looked "dirty" when I was done. Then the loader tractor with a 72" back blade. Faster yet because the bucket complemented the blade but darn, it killed my back looking t9 the rear all the time. Then came an F935 Deere with 48" 2 stage blower and heated cab. Omg, it is awesome!!! Clean looking job, easily 3 times faster and comfortable! I blow my 2 large drives and 4 or 5 neighbors in 1 to 1.5 hrs while smoking a good cigar and drinking a beer. Retired the F935 from mowing this year so its an exclusive snow machine now, till I modify the cab and blower to fit the 1435 front mount. The added HP and 4wd will make the snow blower without any question the king of the neighborhood.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
That sounds wonderful! Moving snow can be quite enjoyable when you're set up correctly. Sounds like you have it figured out my friend. 👍🏻
@tcmits3699Ай бұрын
@@digdrivediyl also had a snowblower on my JD F930 no cab, never been so cold. Now I have a tractor mounted V-Blade and l use the snowblower JD as a snowpusher with tire chains and diff lock. Now we haven't had any measurable snow in the last few years, oh well
@buildlife2 жыл бұрын
I think the "no piles" from the snow blower is reason enough. Especially in the spring when you can see green grass but still have mountains of snow everywhere destroying my hope for an early spring!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Truth right here! :)
@bradleyphillips2042 жыл бұрын
Blade seems to work for snow that's under a foot. Deep powder the snow blower. Loaders nice to be able to put snow off to the side wherever you want but my first time using one I didn't set the bucket the right way and ended up scraping lines in my driveway even though I floated the bucket. I had it tilted. Luckily some blacktop sealer should fix that in the summer. I also found you don't go far till the bucket loads up. I'm sure as you said everyone has a different method for what they do. Great comparison. Thanks.
@CushmanAcres9 ай бұрын
Love this video! It was neat seeing side by side how the methods of snow removal did. We have used a slow blade and blower at our place and definitely prefer the blower. Thanks for taking time to put this together!
@MichaelTJD602 жыл бұрын
Great comparison here Neil. Very well thought out and it's great that you have two 755's to make the comparison as fair as possible.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
I've always found it handy to have multiple tractors! :) Thanks Michael!
@kolt4d559 Жыл бұрын
Loader/backhoe for the win, because you can make your own sledding hill if there isn't one around. Seriously though the best option is the one that works for your conditions. Being in a suburban Mid-Atlantic area wet snow / slush is definitely a problem. I have a long-ish driveway (comparatively to my neighbors [210ft]) so I have been pondering buying a sub-compact tractor to speed up snow removal. Currently we use a 24" walk behind blower and while that can gunk up with slush and ice; it is less backbreaking than shoveling. For a light amount of fluffy snow I will pick which ever I fancy. For more accumulation the blower is the go to choice. However I will make a second pass with a scraper shovel to remove the small amount that the blower can't remove, especially if we are expecting a quick that and refreeze cycle (this is easier than trying to recover a vehicle that is precariously about to slide down the hillside, ask me how I know).
@homesteadspirit92092 жыл бұрын
Me personally will forever be a fan of a front mount blade but with my compact I used to have it was always loader and rear angle blade teamup!
@TylerBoespflug Жыл бұрын
Clearly the loader or a loader mounted pusher and blade are the winner because you make snow piles for the kiddos. :) That said, I have a dirt bucket, snow bucket and snow plow for my mini skidsteer and a blower for my lawn tractor. They all get used in the winter depending on the snow type and area I am doing snow removal so I agree with your determination that mileage may vary. Quick and easy attachment changes makes a world of difference. I find myself using 2 or three different attachments in one cleanup session around the house.
@adampittman16242 жыл бұрын
I think all options are great options and I feel it comes down to ur location and mostly ur preference on which works best for u and in most cases (cost) has a lot do do with it unfortunately. I have a small landscaping business which in winter I plow few commercial lots and residential driveways I finally purchased a plow for my truck but for longest time I got by using just the loader on my tractor but anyway another great video and love the ending
@jessekooistra6200 Жыл бұрын
1-3 inches, blade. Anything over 6 inches, Blower. Loader for pushing piles during a bad winter. Never wanted a snow blower will my first walk behind but I'd never not have one now. I have a JD 318 with modded blower and back blade, another 318 with 4 way blade, and a Cub 169 with Johnson loader...Honda HSS928 walk behind for good measure. Like you, I buy them needing work...at most I have $1700 in everything. The toys definitely make a winter chore pretty damn fun.
@AprilRaine60 Жыл бұрын
I love how you did the comparisons although I only have a suburban driveway that is small and we use a snowblower. But I love learning about this type of things.
@cwolff51192 жыл бұрын
True, the local conditions, road surface, kind of snow, your equipment, costs, etc. all drive the solution that works best for you. I’m a tad confused….the snow blower legs reduced gravel intake but the blade legs did not? The ideal IMO is gauge wheels on the blade.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Gauge wheels would be a great idea! I've never modified a set of blade legs enough to make them work like the blower feet. With the angling of the blade the feet must easily pivot and work in different positions. With freezing and packed snow they always seem to get stuck in one way or another. The round blade feet don't have enough surface area to keep them affectively above the gravel most of the time. The snow blower with it's fixed feet and inability to pivot means the feet can have plenty of surface area to maintain their ability to keep the cutting edge off the stones. It just holds it's position better over time than what a blade will do in my experience. Once the ground is all good and frozen it doesn't matter as much and I'll even take the feet off but for those first couple snow events, the blade always seems to move stones no matter how hard I try. Blower = not so much.
@cwolff51192 жыл бұрын
@@digdrivediy steiner makes gauge wheels for its blades.
@WatchWesWork2 жыл бұрын
My only experience with blowers is the PTO driven units that go on a 3 point hitch. The problems with those is most bigger tractors cannot go slow enough in reverse to keep from bogging down. I use a front end loader with a blade on the rear. With chains on the tires there nothing I can't plow through. I can make a quick pass with the front bucket to open things up, then use the blade on the rear to really scrape down to gravel (or right through it if I'm not paying attention).
@a.stelline2 жыл бұрын
Good point Wes, back blade goes a long way
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
I've seen that in action and it is a fine specimen. Can't go wrong with the versatility of a loader. I really need to find a rear blade to play with. Thanks Wes!
@rodbagley16862 жыл бұрын
Looking for a good offset back blade now to do just like you said.
@erice95362 жыл бұрын
Interesting comparison. After watching all these videos, I still use my 1979 Simplicity lawn tractor with a blower as my dedicated machine to move snow. The 1025R doesn't leave the barn. I do wish I had a cab, windy nights are no fun. :)
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Perfect.
@joshuaschneider35912 жыл бұрын
A 1974 Allis Chalmers 712h is the basis of my homemade compact tractor I call the Chore-Handler! I had to fab up a larger front cabinet for the 42" blower to be wider than my axles (52" now). I was worried it would struggle to keep up with a heavy snow, but the last storm dropped 18" of non-fluffy stuff and I could only bog the engine with the heavy crud at the roadside. I'm impressed with how overbuilt the rear axles and pumps were on those machines. The goal is to make it articulate this summer, as the original steering setup struggles against the larger front wheels (23x10.5s) and to power the front axle for a true 4x4. Every time I see these JD 755s work though, I think the Chore-Handler is going to be passed to my kids so I can upgrade to a more capable project!
@Erhorn3002 жыл бұрын
Back blade and front blade on your 755, then a 12ft pusher for your backhoe! We have a 12ft pusher on a 2 year old JD 310 backhoe and all i can say is WOW!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
That would be FUN! Wal Mart here I come :)
@robertreinhart2 жыл бұрын
I didn't read every comment but when I lived in a windswept area and had a snow blade, I was plowing every few hours. I had snow piles everywhere. I purchased a snow blower and I cut my snow time down to 2 passes vs hours of moving snow. That was the good part, the bad part was I lost all that tractor time outside in the fresh air. Now live in a wooded area and use the tractor bucket and I throw the back blade on the 3-point hitch for the weight and any fine tuning I might have near structures. The snowblower just sits but I am afraid to sell it because it would cost me too much to replace it, if I ever needed one.
@elektrikman8834 Жыл бұрын
I've done it all over the 40+ years I've been removing snow and the blower in deep snow will win every time y next go to is the plow and lastly is my bucket too much time involved with the bucket but these are just my experiences and my preference thanks for a great vid.
@johndeere322_snowblowing92 жыл бұрын
You are totally wrionght!!! LOL I own a John Deere 322 with heated cab dedicated for snow removal and could not go without it. Love this thing. I'm in Canada, so lots of snow here. Winter is coming Yeaaaaaaa. Cheers
@duaneamos44132 жыл бұрын
Great video and good job on the comparisons....I would have graded them exactly the way you did. I don't have one either but I would like a snow blade for my loader with a hydraulic angle...I think that would be ideal! Great video Neil...take care from Franklin County, Va.
@WoodworkingBusinessmen2 жыл бұрын
Great video. I use mostly a 3 point blade on my JD 755 here in MN (don't really use the loader for snow). Saving up for a 3 point blower as we have a 750' gravel driveway.
@enduser19822 жыл бұрын
Yeh Buddy! Each attachment has it's own place, I have a three lane driveway I personally use my loader /bucket
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
I'm with ya!
@tjtobin86 Жыл бұрын
I'm in a somewhat rare situation. I get tons of snow (up north). No trees and flat plains results in drifts often double or triple the height of a walk behind snow blower. But my driveway is about 5 car lengths long and 4 wide. I used to move the snow with a combination of an atv and blade (only worked if I got started before it was drifting) and a walk behind snowblower and just taking a ton of time. I have an acre and a half (reason I now own a small tractor - 1025r). For my unusual situation, the bucket wins. I can take the snow and pile it out of the way, it came with the tractor, and the whole thing can fit in a garage stall ready to open the door and plow the driveway. This is a cool video showing the situations each is good at.
@mrdude2702 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this three way test. I've contemplated these three for some time. I am currently using a blade on my Deere. Originally I had extra weight on the back, like your brother did. But I found you can have too much weight on the back which takes too much weight off the front wheels, causing the sliding he was experiencing. Try removing about half of that ballast weight from the back and I think he have an easier time on the snow. In the end, your results were identical to what I concluded as well. For me, the Kabota loader was great but the blade did a better job, especially with the wet snow that we get in the Pac NW. Thanks, and happy plowing
@jonl2938 Жыл бұрын
In Northern Ontario my preferred setup is front loader and 3 point rear blower. We get a lot of snow and my driveway is long, the blower is by far the best option, but having the loader on the front is nice for knocking down banks when they get up to 6’ or higher.
@lucgoulet3153 Жыл бұрын
I agree the snowblower is not convenient and sometimes I use it to push no as long as it's not too heavy. The main thing with a snowblower is to have a plan so that you know where the snows going to go. Not all your neighbours wants to have snow on their yard.
@jec6613 Жыл бұрын
Fun video! I've found that my much smaller tractor mounted blower has no trouble with heavy wet stuff though. A few years ago I had 18" of snow compact down to 6" of wet mess with half an inch of ice on top, and the John Deere blower ate right through it - just took me an extra 5 minutes going a bit slower. I do have a bit more horsepower available to the blower, it's newer with fresh paint to release the snow faster, and a smaller 44" model, giving it a lot of advantages in truly deep or wet stuff - so as with anything your mileage will vary.
@SnootchieBootchies27 Жыл бұрын
Depends on the snow, depends on what you're trying to clear, and where you can deposit the excess snow. So.... depends. But my overall favorite for small scale/driveway; definitely a snowblower.
@flatlandergarage97642 жыл бұрын
I have a brand new John Deere 2025R with both a blower and a loader. We service a small mobile home community with it and I can definitely say they both have thier merits. The loader is great for digging out piles and shaving ice but the blower is great for directly filling the trailer from the street maximizing our productivity. Anyways I love your videos and I hope all is well. From: Angus Mackay Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada
@curtwhite8762 жыл бұрын
Definitely a little bias in this one, but it was very well thought out. I personally use a 7' grader blade with a couple custom plow shoe brakets. I mount the blade to my FEL using an adapter plate from Titan. With the right amount of curl, the shoes keep the blade from picking up gravel.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Interesting that you say that cause I am trying hard to not have a bias. I wouldn't have that snowblower if not for KZbin. I wish for my loader to be the only thing I needed so badly. But, after using the blower with a cab I probably am biased I suppose. It's just fun blasting that snow out there 😋 Nice work on those custom shoes! It's all about saving the gravel for me! Thanks as always Curt!
@krampp242 жыл бұрын
Honestly i think you need someone who usually uses a plow and well you use the blower....im having to agree with curt on this one
@courtneyanderson22932 жыл бұрын
Cleared snow at cemetery 3 times last week and will be 3 times this week. 30" of compacted and crusty snow. I use the loader to pull snow out of some areas that may have debris, rocks etc. The blower does 99% of the work and it can put a 6" rock through the chute without much issue. 84" blower, 66hp 4066r cab tractor and it will blow snow far faster than I could ever move with the loader. The quick hitch also makes the rear blower a 5-10 minute hook up. Still waiting for the inverted Normand blower to show up, running a conventional blower until then. I also have a 3520 with front mount 59" blower and it does a good job, but there is no comparison to the 84". I went through 12 or so shear pins in 2 months with the 59"Probably double the capacity, speed and ease of use. A rear blower would clear the area you marked out within 2-3 minutes.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
That's awesome! An 84" blower would be a beast. I should make this part of my 5 year plan. I will just drive around the neighborhood and be the favorite neighbor!
@bobgrier31032 жыл бұрын
I learned that living in western North Carolina, with minimum snowfalls beats them all. Our primary issue is 2nd and 3rd day black ice from the freeze/FHAs cycle.
@dls6625 Жыл бұрын
Love the race. I am a snow blower fan myself. Pushing it leaves huge piles on the edges of your driveway and eventually you're 28 foot wide driveway is now only 22 feet depending on how much snowfall you got. Snow blower you can put that snow in the neighbors yard if you want to or throw it over the house into the back yard. It also causes less damage to your yard and concrete or asphalt.
@WaynesWorldGarage2 жыл бұрын
Hilariously, I bought a used 59" snow blower for my 4400 three years ago. Still waiting for the big snow here in Annapolis Maryland. We do use the blade though all the time. On asphalt it's very fast.
@williampourcho36812 жыл бұрын
There is no doubt about the winner in this video. It's your dad-pounding his chest and marking his territory!!!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Haha! For sure!
@christophersiano9692 жыл бұрын
Wet snow? I'll take a Blower EVERY time. Maybe it's just my equipment, but the tractor mounted blower I have can not only sling slush over 15 feet, but I had a storm earlier this season where I was throwing mostly water. In the end, getting the water off the driveway meant that we had a lot less ice on the drive when it froze. Even my walk-behind blower will make impressive ice sausages in the slush. If the snow is not watery, the only thing I notice is that I need to go slower to process the more dense material and it does not sling quite as far. If you score the blower high in dryer snow, it should also score high in the wet. As for sticking, just spray the inner of the blower with a cheap cooking spray. I've never had anything stay stuck doing that.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Nice to hear this. I had mine all sprayed down this year and it made a huge difference.
@k.b.322 Жыл бұрын
you admitting "you dont necessarily agree with it" made this entire video!
@bryanworth82922 жыл бұрын
Yeah , the smaller tractor with the blade has a tendency to have the front end get pushed to the side in deeper snow . I have a 2019 2025r with a boom mounted front blade . It works pretty well at piling snow and costs a bunch less than a blower . I did just buy a used frontier 60 in snow pusher and can't wait (not really lookin forward to snow!) to try it out . This one has a back drag to clean up by my garage door also . I also have a 60 in frontier rear blade that works well as long as the ground is frozen . Thinkin bout fabricating some plow shoes for it . I also have a pair of edge tamers for my bucket . You can clean up grassy areas without tearing up the yard with them .
@noahh82532 жыл бұрын
I found your channel through your rental firewood processor video. I am a firewood fanatic but have found the rest of your videos very entertaining. I love the family aspect of the channel and the narration is at a professional level. Thanks for what you do!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the kind words Noah and I appreciate you taking a look around the channel! It's always great to hear from new viewers and hopefully we'll see you around.
@senorblanco1975 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for helping me decide. I live at 8700ft in mountains of Colorado. We usually get 6-7 ft in winter. Think I'll get a blower for my 3 point! Thanks for your video!
@raysimpson294511 ай бұрын
Very good test and comparison! I have a 2002 4400 with both the blade and blower attachments and find them equally effective. As far as the rocks go because our yard is all gravel and a shop and house full of windows, we let the snow pack a little layer. I will say the blower is probably the better option for the fact you can remove the same footprint every time where as the blade you will loose a little bit of "storage" area every time you move snow... West central Alberta, Canada
@BigFarles2 жыл бұрын
Your laugh at the end is pure joy. I applaud you for the amount of work you put in on this video. I don’t know if my college work got this kind of attention. Also the and amount of work you got your dad and brother to do in the name of KZbin is awesome. “Hey guys it snowed again so let’s do another test”. Haha. Great job.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Marcus. This video was a huge amount of work actually. I didn't realize when I started in with it how long it would take. I cut a huge amount out of it too! :) Very true on my Dad and brother too. They're always willing to help. What you didn't see though is that the night before that blower tractor and backhoe was at their houses clearing snow! :) What was your college work that you reference? Maybe you've mentioned it before and I forget.
@BigFarles2 жыл бұрын
@@digdrivediy haha I just meant college assignments.
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
@@BigFarles Gotcha :)
@wheelstandr Жыл бұрын
Having a tractor with a snowblower like that is my dream. I am currently using a Can am 570 outlander with a 60" plow w/drift cutters. Its nice enough but I'm the guy that likes it neat and would also like to be in a warm cab instead.
@khtractors2 жыл бұрын
Great comparison video! My number 1 pick out of what I have to use is a 3 point rear angle blade. I’ve never used a blower any. Really enjoyed this!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ben!
@sassafrasvalley19392 жыл бұрын
Neil… you left out a category… Least likely to cover your cart full of firewood! Then, the blower is definitely a 3! How about: Builds best sled hill on the prairie. Again, the blower would likely lose… unless you had all day to blow it several passes around a circle. And what about: Looks cooler in action. Well there is no question the blower wins this one!!! You know, if you had an SSQA mount and hydraulic powered blower… the change over time would be cut down to just… a cab install greater than the bucket! I looked at a used Land Pride blower that was built for my baby backhoe. Some guy had moved here from up north and traded it in at the dealer. It looked really cool and because it had sat in the back lot for over a year… the dealer really wanted ti deal. But, I’m standing there in the 100f August sun weighing the options… do I get a blower in the hopes that we will get a snow deep enough to use it? Or, spend the same amount and get a grapple that I can use 12 months a year? Mind you, my new storage barn had room fit one it the other… not both. And Nana thought I needed neither.. You know Neil, I have used that grapple three time more often than I thought I would. And… my neighbors have been so impressed with it… they’ve had me come over to their place and demonstrate how it works… multiple times and for hours on end! Do I regret not getting the blower? I kinda do. Think about this… according to my dealer. He has sold two snow blowers for tractors my size… one new and that used one, (He’s only sold a few others of any size!). So, that would give me a pretty good Unique Factor rating for miles and miles around! I mean, how cool would it be to pull that baby out on the one snowfall of the year (that’s deep enough to use it) and blow the dickens out of my short driveway… while my neighbors are struggling with their bucket loaders to clear theirs? Perhaps they would invite me to demonstrate it on their driveways? Perhaps you should add two more categories to your list of attributes: Neighbor Envy and Community Relations… both might be solid wins for the blower… and… might help me build justification for that storage barn add-on project that I’ve started dropping hints on!!! Neil… everyone’s situation is different… but, you have to admit… these categories could easily fit on the extra lines if your spreadsheet!
@digdrivediy2 жыл бұрын
Those are spectacular ideas for extra categories! Every time you comment I wished I had consulted with you cause you the ideas are spot on! I especially like "neighbor envy" and "community relations". You know, the way that I got my Dad and brother over there so easily is because that snow blower made a trip around the neighborhood the evening before this and cleared both of their driveways! The funny thing is that I wouldn't have that blower if not for KZbin. I only put it on to do some videos but I have apparently developed quite a bias for it. It is incredibly fun and so easy to use. You just drive it around where you don't want there to be snow anymore! If there's a 3 foot drift, just point that tractor with blower towards it and it will go away! We have had a 49" snowblower for my Dad's 140 John Deere garden tractor my entire life. I've only mounted it up one or two times since I've been old enough to do it myself. It works great, but it just wasn't big enough for our big farm lots. But somehow that extra 10" and the second stage capabilities of that 59" blower makes all the difference... plus the soft side cab! Well, it's never too early to start considering a comparison video for next year. I'll try to remember to put neighbor minded items on the list cause those are strong categories. I sold my truck mounted snowplow for that very reason; too many neighbors knew I had it and every time it snowed I was never home! Now all I have to do is drive around the country mile on my snow blower tractor and get coffee and cookies from Mom and a cold barley pop from my brother! Thanks Dave :)