Good Morning My Friend 👍😇👌 I CAN WAIT TO HAVE A REAL SNOW DUMP UP HERE MAAAAAN ( WERE ARE LACKING SO MUCH OF IT !!! Only 1-3 inches in the last 3 weeks !!!! ) 🥴🤣👍 OUTSTANDING LIVE DEMO SIR💪👍👌😇 Going to see the next video riiight now !!! Cheers 😇😇👌👌👍👍🍻🍻
My 1969 Case 220 has to be a little over 1000 lbs with its plow and wheel weights on, as the bare tractor is about 720 lbs. It has the very heavy plow frame that attaches in front of the rear tires. Probably not fair to count the whole weight of the blade and plow frame though. If the snow is wet it will push enough snow to bog its old 10 hp engine.
Sitting here eating pop tarts considering what I need to get done today... and your video made me cold lol. Those older units are tanks compared to 99% of the stuff on the market today. I hope I can work that well out in the cold today!
What is it called that your blade is was going straight without knowing a candle or nothing on that. They're in the turnip to the left or right. I love that thing, so that's nice to straight and well. You got that thing to no good. What kind of tractor is that? And what's the horse power and stuff?
Nice! I have a 446 that I plow with on blacktop. I currently have the OEM turf tires and don't get good traction, do the AG tire work better for plowing snow?
Thank you sir. I would say the turfs would actually do better as you have more rubber on pavement. The key is weight and lots of it, and sometimes chains are needed. For example this tractor has around 40 lbs of washer fluid per tire, 50 lbs of cast weights per tire, and 92 lbs on the rear, plus my 220 lbs. Totaling almost 500 lbs. My driveway is fairly flat. If it wasn’t I’d probably also run chains