How To Choose A Snowblower


If you live in a region that gets heavy snow during the winter or if you’re a property owner who has trouble removing snow by hand you might want to consider buying a new or used snowblowers. For regions where the snowfall is lighter or for smaller drive ways a single stage machine ought to be sufficient. If however your area receives very heavy snow or you have a large area to clear a double stage machine would be a better option.

Do You Need a Single or Double Stage Snowblower

When thinking about the type and model you will buy take into account the size of the area carefully. Fit the width of the pathway you have to clear with the clearing width of the snowblower model, to minimise the number of passes you?ll need to make. Also think about the annual snowfall in your region and how ?packable? the snow is. If you get in the region of 50 inches of snow each winter a single stage snowblower would be adequate for the job. For any more than this or for districts where the snow is mostly wet you will certainly be better with a double stage snowblower with a motor of seven hp or more.

Some Types of Snowblowers

In a single stage snowblower an auger, which is a rotating drum cuts the snow then lifts it to be discharged through a chute. A double stage snowblower works in the same way, as the snow is cut but impellers then work to throw the snow into the chute. So the snow is thrown further and with superior force and the snow can be cleared much faster. For both types the discharge can be adjusted by angle and direction. A double stage snowblower uses more power so a larger motor is needed which increases the manufacturing costs.

Single Stage Snowblowers

Carefully consider the clearing path when you are purchasing a new snowblower. Single stage snowblowers have clearing paths between 20 and 22″ which is adequate for small areas but would result in many passes for a large area. They are fairly easy to look after and being small and compact are much easier to store than a much larger double stage snowblower. Also observe the wheels. Larger wheels help propulsion as the auger blades can bite into the ground much better and which helps to drive the machine forwards. A single stage snowblower bought new is between $300 and $600 with the higher priced snowblowers generally having a more powerful motor and a clearing path that is wider.

Double Stage Snowblowers

For double stage snowblowers clearing paths usually vary between 24-30″ with motors from around 7hp to 13 horse power. Costs vary from approximately $55 to more than $2000 for a sturdy, heavy duty machine for especially large area such as golf courses or parks. For nearly all householders, with a larger area to clear, a more moderately priced middle range machine with a 7-9 horse power engine and a clearing path around 25″ ought to be adequate.

Engines

Craftsman snowblowers have a Briggs & Stratton engines which need no pre-mixing of the oil and gas and have much lower noise, toxic emissions and vibrations. A lot of of the models have electric starters which are much easier to work with in the cold than a recoil starter. Honda snowblowers use overhead cam motors which are able to operate for roughly an hour and thirty minutes on one tankful of gas.

Snowblower Sizes and Weights

Find out about the weight of the snowblower before you get it. Several are a great deal heavier than others and if you have to move it up and down steps when you store it for the summer a very heavy machine will make this harder. Also confirm you have room to store your machine. Double stage snowblowers are sizeable and occupy more space than a compact single stage machine.

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