The snow blower, albeit doing well, I wouldn't say it would outclass a Canadian made snow blower (Canadians invented them after all as well as the railroad rotary plow) and there's a bit of a trick to running a V-type drag snow blower. It's nice to have a feed auger stretching across the width of the machine as the machine doesn't end up too long. I think I would still prefer a Lucknow-branded 3 pt or even if they make a front mount would be nice too.
Hi there. Would be great to see a Canadian snowblower in action. You Canadians are quite familiar with snow and heavy loads of it as well😅 My blowrer is a V blower from Tokvam. I think it is 210c, wide. It have V shape so it is good for dragging snow in driveways etc. since not all driveways does not have place for the snow to be stored and then you can drag it to a more suitable spot before staring your snowblower. My tractor have independent PTO as well so I can start it when needed without using clutch or stopping the tractor, that’s nice. Thanks for commenting. Have a nice day👍
Hi there. Tokvam does make this quite similar today as well. The design is unique and it takes both wet and dry snow. Compared to a two stage type this is very good at taking several drive ways as is can drag a lot of snow. Check out tokvam.com and you will see that the design is quite similar with the new ones as well. Mine is 210 cm I think. And you get a larger one if you have a large tractor. My blower is from 2006.
It's perfect for driveways that need snow dragged away from the house/garage. Most residential driveways in North America don't have a turnaround space. And antique equipment is most often far superior to the Shiny Chinee crap that you would like.
@@tomahawksteak6672 when clearing snow in smal spaces it is most suffient to have the loader high to not bump into things. I usually take off my loader bucket but during winter it’s nice to have. In my case I have snow chains (120kilos) and the snow blower (600kilos) so the tractor is very stabile and have alot of weight on it to stable it. I also have the wheels on maximum with at frond (adjustable) so in my case it does not matter. I rearly drive in steep slopes and turn at the same time either. If you have only the tractor with the loader up and you have a heavy bucket and you do a sudden turn when in a hill it’s possible.
The snow blower, albeit doing well, I wouldn't say it would outclass a Canadian made snow blower (Canadians invented them after all as well as the railroad rotary plow) and there's a bit of a trick to running a V-type drag snow blower. It's nice to have a feed auger stretching across the width of the machine as the machine doesn't end up too long. I think I would still prefer a Lucknow-branded 3 pt or even if they make a front mount would be nice too.
Hi there. Would be great to see a Canadian snowblower in action. You Canadians are quite familiar with snow and heavy loads of it as well😅 My blowrer is a V blower from Tokvam. I think it is 210c, wide. It have V shape so it is good for dragging snow in driveways etc. since not all driveways does not have place for the snow to be stored and then you can drag it to a more suitable spot before staring your snowblower. My tractor have independent PTO as well so I can start it when needed without using clutch or stopping the tractor, that’s nice. Thanks for commenting. Have a nice day👍
Canada is about to become the U.S. 51st state. Several of our American cities have a much larger population than your entire 'country'.
That blower is an antique. That design wouldn't cut it here servicing residential driveways
Hi there. Tokvam does make this quite similar today as well. The design is unique and it takes both wet and dry snow. Compared to a two stage type this is very good at taking several drive ways as is can drag a lot of snow. Check out tokvam.com and you will see that the design is quite similar with the new ones as well. Mine is 210 cm I think. And you get a larger one if you have a large tractor. My blower is from 2006.
It's perfect for driveways that need snow dragged away from the house/garage. Most residential driveways in North America don't have a turnaround space.
And antique equipment is most often far superior to the Shiny Chinee crap that you would like.
@@WayneMarion that I would like? What you mean?
@@WayneMarion Did I offend you Wayne. LOL
Not the safest way to drive a tractor with the loader up that high. Good way to tip over. Especially on a 2wd tractor.
@@tomahawksteak6672 when clearing snow in smal spaces it is most suffient to have the loader high to not bump into things. I usually take off my loader bucket but during winter it’s nice to have. In my case I have snow chains (120kilos) and the snow blower (600kilos) so the tractor is very stabile and have alot of weight on it to stable it. I also have the wheels on maximum with at frond (adjustable) so in my case it does not matter. I rearly drive in steep slopes and turn at the same time either. If you have only the tractor with the loader up and you have a heavy bucket and you do a sudden turn when in a hill it’s possible.
I've never seen a tractor with a raised empty bucket on nearly flat ground tip a tractor over ... and neither have you.