thanks a lot for this vid dude. i get a lot less snow than you and was debating between ego and this one. what i saw here was clear that this thing will be perfect for my driveway
adjust the handle bar lower closer to the shovel head for deep show shoveling close range like that. Making a loop belt and hanging it over the shoulder helps too.
That looked kinda funny the little snow shovel basically buried and it was still eating and throwing the snow...hehe...i have one on the way also and I have the 80v 20 inch snow blower also brand new and this will be nice for smaller jobs...good review. 😊
I give you a little idea attach a strap to atach aroun your shoulder that help you to hold your showvel so you can move up and down to take off easy for each inch of snow , i do that when i am on the roof with this beast :) 6 in odd i let 2 inch on roof to not touch the papper :)
Thanks for the demo. You sealed the deal for me to pick one up for moderate snow so I don't need to drag out the gas powered snow blower. How long does the battery last? I assume you have the 2ah one right?
Not sure. That was too deep for the shovel but it did work. I will use my gas snow blower if I get snow like in the video. The battery lasts about 30min when I use it but I'm only using it for snow under 6in.
@@xxxM85xxx do you think it could be used to clear snow piled up around fire hydrants like in this video? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-rYuwD3JVJs4.html
@@mrbubetube If the snow is piled up infront of the hydrants from a snow plow I doubt it would work. My gas snow blower sometimes has issues with wet piled up snow at the end of my driveway.
@@xxxM85xxx ya I'm just wondering if it can be lifted to the top of a 3 foot pile of snow around a fire hydrant and then used to shave the pile down layer by layer till you get to the bottom. would that work or is it too heavy to keep it lifted to the top of the pile and you're better off just shoveling it? If you look at other videos on youtube about clearing snow around fire hydrants, I notice everybody still does it the same way it was done 100 years ago, by hand with a shovel. I wonder why nobody uses power equipment to clear snow from fire hydrants.