tjoreo
Well-Known Member
Lifetime Member
One thing that I did for having a gravel drive way, was to weld a round pipe on my cutting edge. I like to push the snow across my lawn as soon as i can and hated spreading gravel across the grass. The curved edge leaves a little layer of snow and keeps the gravel from being graded off. My thought was to put it on until the gravel freezes up but I've liked it so much that I've never taken it off. I just used a piece of 2 3/8 oil field pipe and tacked it to the cutting edge and actually raised my plow skids up because they don't touch anyways. Not my idea but something I found that works off a snowplow forum.Thank you, ToddACimer - this is very helpful and brought up another issue.
If I had smooth, flat pavement or cement that pushes off into a ditch, this would be a great set up. And it would really address the underlying problem of the repeated, short lifts that wear and fray the winch cable over time.
I paid several thousand to roll road base on my drive, which has ups and downs, and I rely on the blade pucks and free float to keep from pushing $100 worth of road base over the edge every time I plow. After a bad experience, I use the snowbanks as guides to keep vehicles on the drive so they don't slide into false shoulders. Like I did.
This photo's from a prior post where I nearly rolled on a false shoulder I made for myself. Yes, ended in tow truck shame.
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