assuming i get a job soon enough to profit from my severance payout, i am totally buying a snowblower of some kind before next season. (thus making sure that we have no appreciable snow that year, presumably, because weather likes to be funny like that)
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C
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I figure this season is toast since the money won't show up until the season's nearly over and there are very few left in stock anyways, but I'll keep an eye out for the early season sales in september or october or so.
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Given that a gas engine rates HP at high RPMs and given the losses in belts and transmissions this would equal 25-30 gas HP. So get the biggest one you can man-handle around.
C
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Updating my numbers, I was pulling 575 amps at 30 volts at just below stalling the auger speed. So about 23hp while chewing through the 2 foot packed street-plowed snow at the top. That's a lot, but derate if you are only doing 24 inch swaths.
Wow.
C
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We didn't have a snow storm again until the year I sold it in a yard sale, and then we had that blizzard that shut Seattle down for over a week. Doh!
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Get a gas powered one, power is *way* more important than width.
8HP seems to be the "you better have at least" measure, 24" wide is plenty. It's easy to make multiple passes if the machine is strong enough, nearly impossible if it's not.
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http://www.toro.com/home/snowthrowers/gassinglestage/index.html
I have a CR2450E (CR2450 with Electric Start) which apparently isn't made any more.
One caution. Apparently the Ethanol is current gas is bad for cheap engines. So you probably want to use Premium and a Fuel Stabilizer.
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We love snowblowers. *laughs* It's just so useful with the dry Colorado snow.
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Also, the blower is really adjustable, in terms of range (almost 180 degrees) and height (almost straight down to a big mo-fo arc) allowing us to put the snow exactly where we want it, rather than on our neighbor's cars or what-have-you.
It's gas-powered & we have a small gas can that he replenishes from the station around the corner.
Do you want details on what type ours is?
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