Pro tip: Flip the box blade scarifier rippers up or remove them altogether and use your box blade as a end trail collector. Those pesky little rows left by the plow can be collected up an contained, pulled over to the snowbank and deposited. The push them up the bank with the loader.
Man, that setup looks fantastic! Someone has an old Boss V blade with no hydraulics on Facebook for $200, my next project. That loader/plow is awesome, thanks for sharing your idea and proving how nice it worked. GREAT JOB 👍
Great video and build. I wonder how it will work ( the 2" pipe welded to the cutting edge) a heavy wet snow? I like the part about not scraping up the sod or putting gravel in the yard.
@@raygobearsgo That is a concern. The pipe may want to climb up on top of heavy wet snow... But I can always put a little down pressure with the loader, so hopefully that may help.
Most of the time I just leave it on float... But, sometimes with the blade angled and pushing a lot of snow, the tractor wants to be pushed to the opposite side. In that case, I will lift the blade up a little off the ground and it usually straightens out.
Pro tip: Flip the box blade scarifier rippers up or remove them altogether and use your box blade as a end trail collector. Those pesky little rows left by the plow can be collected up an contained, pulled over to the snowbank and deposited. The push them up the bank with the loader.
Great idea! Thanks for watching! 👍🏻
Man, that setup looks fantastic! Someone has an old Boss V blade with no hydraulics on Facebook for $200, my next project. That loader/plow is awesome, thanks for sharing your idea and proving how nice it worked. GREAT JOB 👍
Thank you! That plow sounds perfect for a project like this! Thanks for watching!
Great video and build. I wonder how it will work ( the 2" pipe welded to the cutting edge) a heavy wet
snow? I like the part about not scraping up the sod or putting gravel in the yard.
@@raygobearsgo That is a concern. The pipe may want to climb up on top of heavy wet snow... But I can always put a little down pressure with the loader, so hopefully that may help.
Chains wont change much better fix is fill front tires with fluid or buy weights for it
are you just floating the loader when pushing or are you constantly adjusting?
Most of the time I just leave it on float... But, sometimes with the blade angled and pushing a lot of snow, the tractor wants to be pushed to the opposite side. In that case, I will lift the blade up a little off the ground and it usually straightens out.
What model LS are you using?
This is a MT2-25E. Thanks for watching!