Elk97
WKR
Used to have several plow trucks that did over 600 parking lots. Western and Boss seemed to be the best but all seemed to do the job.
um no, lots of guys run new trucks with plows. lots of guys.For a 1/4th mile, I’d consider a ATV setup or an old tractor. As mentioned above, you’ll seldom see a plow attachment on a “nice” truck. Usually a beater.
On the blowers, how do you keep the rocks out of them on a gravel lane?
um no, lots of guys run new trucks with plows. lots of guys.
I prefer Western but as someone else said you'll need a beefier alternator and a 2nd battery if you're smart. I've plowed commercially for over 30 years and every time I get a new truck it gets a new plow. These are my daily drivers all year the plow doesn't hurt them and ups the resale.Hey guys, my cousin's lane is about 1/4 mile long and unpaved. He's looking to buy a plow for the front of his F350. This would be for personal use only, not business. Any recommendations?
I agree completely. I don't even like running a skidsteer with heat let alone sitting on an atv in wet snow. With age comes wisdom.I have been using western plows for the last 28 years and have no complaints. There are a lot of ways to move snow, but if you have to do it often a warm pickup with a plow on front is best.
if you have a gravel drive rocks will be every where come spring, no matter what you do to remove snow.
the blowers have skids to keep them up off the gravel but it is a fine line between moving enough snow and moving rocks.
if it is frozen hard enough it will help.
Just throw a few extra washers on top of the plow shoes for gravel driveways. Problem solved.I have gravel and use a blade. I pack the first 6 inches of snow falls then start plowing after that. All my gravel is on my driveway in the spring. You don’t scrape a gravel driveway down to the gravel.
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Just throw a few extra washers on top of the plow shoes for gravel driveways. Problem solved.
I’d do similar if my daughter didn’t drive a car with little ground clearance. That Impala does not do well in snow.I have gravel and use a blade. I pack the first 6 inches of snow falls then start plowing after that. All my gravel is on my driveway in the spring. You don’t scrape a gravel driveway down to the gravel.
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I recommend 1" crushed rock with fines for your driveway. However, if you have mud problems, maybe consider 2" crushed rock with fines as a base. Let it pack over a season and then get the 1" crushed with fines as the top layer. This will give you much better traction.I don't know about you guys, but my dirt plowed driveway always turns into a sheet of ice.
Wood stove ash spread, from my house to my shop is how I can walk to the shop and not fall on the ice with water on it. Next snowfall and i will have to be chained up.
I’d do similar if my daughter didn’t drive a car with little ground clearance. That Impala does not do well in snow.
Not to argue an atv vs truck, but if you do ever get to see what a tracked atv with a plow can do....it'll surprise you. 16" is a bunch, but if it wont make it in one push, it'll walk on top and you can slot doze down.....and they can stack it as high as wanted. The tracks will push a full blade up a 2:1 slope easily. It's impressive to see.