Abby's Guide to Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more)
Username Password
Discussions Reviews More Guides

Member Profile


fasteddie

Name ed lanier
Email Address private
AIM
YIM
ICQ
Gender
Age
Location
Personal Quote
Privileges Normal user
Rank
Points 2
Number of Posts 2
Number of Reviews 0
Date Joined Jan 17, 2013
Date Last Access Feb 18, 2013 7:42 am
fasteddie's last  
Re: Did we miss out on 2005-2011 John Deere Snow Blowers?
#1   Feb 16, 2013 8:44 am
Hi I thought I would chime in. I purchased a new ariens 30 delux in late Dec. 20012. It is my first snowblower as the last 40 years I have used a 4 w Wheeldrive pickup and plow.to clear my 135 foot long x 18 foot wide driveway. I have been a Briggs and Stratton man all my life and find the 342 cc engine on my ariens Had plenty of power after 2013 blizzard to clear 21 to 23 inches of snow full chute wide I live in a rural area and we have our share of power outage problems My old powermate (1983) briggs flathead still runs strong. Last fall I purchased a B&S 10000 generator with a 420 cc engine. Are the newer engines as good as the older all American made engines? HELL NO I owned and operated a automotive machine shop for 37 years and worked on just about everything. There is a BRIGGS dealer on every corner in America for parts and service.
ariens st 30 le delux
#2   Jan 17, 2013 11:09 am
Hello
I'm a first time poster here and a first time snowblower user.
I recently bought Ariens ST 30 LE deluxe snowblower.
It is a very nice machine and well built and with the Briggs & Stratton 342 cc engine it has more power then I will probably ever need.
The first snow storm here in Connecticut was about 7 to 8 inches of light powdery snow.
The snowblower worked as advertised and did a good job on my driveway which is 135 feet long and 18 feet wide.
I think that throwing distance of up to 50 feet is a little bit of marketing exaggeration, my machine will throw snow
approximately 30 to 35 feet which is more than adequate to my driveway.
The last storm we had this week it snowed a bout 1 1/2 inches and then rained the rest of the night making
a slushy mess to snow blow. It rendered my machine about useless to this task as it continually clogged
the chute no matter how slow I tried to let the auger do its job.
As in many of the reads in the site it seems that the low-speed is too fast for the auger to process this wet snow.
Has anyone ever tried to change the pulley ratio between the engine drive pulley and the transmission drive pulley
to slow down the forward motion of the machine.
I realize it would cut down on the top speed of the machine which I doubt I would ever use anyway.
I am probably spoiled because for the past forty years I have used a pickup truck and a plow to clear this driveway
but the old truck has given up the ghost and pricing something to replace it it seemed a snowblower would be
a more economical answer. I'm sure in the future with more normal snow conditions this machine will more than do the job.
Any suggestions to help out the slush conditions would all be appreciated as a new snowblower operator I am
still learning the ropes of snow blowing.
Regards
                Ed
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Guide   •   Discussions  Reviews  
AbbysGuide.com   About Us   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Contact Us
Copyright 1998-2024 AbbysGuide.com. All rights reserved.
Site by Take 42