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Anyone using compact tractors for snow removal?

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63K views 32 replies 28 participants last post by  KFX450RXC  
#1 ·
I have a 2305 Deere we use for residential landscape work. We adore that little tractor. However an opportunity has come up where I could use a larger tractor. I notice deere shows front snow box blades but does anyone use a tractor this small for snow removal? if so any pictures of your setup?

I am looking at a 3720 w / cab. 44hp engine.
 
#2 ·
My friend has a 40hp John Deere and it plows good when there is no ice. When there is ice all it does is spin. If he had chains on it, it would plow gret.
 
#5 ·
I have a 3720. I run a 7 foot blade on the loader and a 74 inch blower on the back. We just do drives with it. The loader isn't really built for pushing snow and the tractor really struggles w/ traction. I don't think it would move an 8 foot pusher full of snow, if it did it wouldn't steer it. We had a light weight 8ft pusher on a TC33 before and it had weights and fluid in all 4 tires and still didn't steer well. If you're gonna push with a tractor, a frame mounted plow would be way better than a loader. Anyway, what we do is backdrag the drives to the street and then blow the piles in the yard. Or for sideloads just back in blowing.
 
#7 ·
We have a 2305 with a 47"snow blower on the front and the Kubota equivalent with a 5' blade on the front that we use for sidewalks. Both work really well for that application. I've also used the 2305 in loading docks and drive throughs when the snow needs to get blown out of corners.
 
#8 ·
A guy by me used to plow 35 driveways with an older Deere with a front-mount blower and a rear 6ft blade, slickest residential set-up I've ever seen.
 
#9 ·
we use a 23.5hp massey gc 2300, we built a 5 ft push with it, and it works great, truth be told it gives my skid steers a run for their money, but only because in high speed it is running at 25km, but seriously though, i love my little tractor
 
#13 ·
Place I used to a couple of different small tractors at a local college I worked at a few yeras back. We had two JD 870's 28 hp. and two JD 955's 33 hp. Both ran seven foot blades, full cabs, heat, and a ton of lights. They both worked great and moved tons of snow even though the 870's were only two wheel drive. USed them on both walks and in the lots.
 
#14 ·
The deere snow blower ( frontier brand ) is on back order until aug 2010. You might find someone with one in stock. I ended up going with a 54" blade that uses the loader hydraulics. 1300.00... Will do exactly what I need it to.
 
#15 ·
I use a 41 horse Mahindra 4x4 with just the 6' bucket to open a 1/2 mile road. With light snow, I can just keep pushing for the whole way. I've done a 14" snowfall and it just keeps going. With heavy snow, I'll have to push off to the side a few times to empty the bucket.

Image
 
#16 ·
I use a 2310 New Holland tractor 40 HP with a Pro-Tec 8' Skid steer pusher on front and a 7' rear blade. The tractor is equipped with turf tires which are loaded with ballast. The tractor plows well at a large church property with a lot of parking islands and sidewalk curbs. The longest push is about 200'. No trouble at all with a recent 6" snowfall. It is a lot more manueverable in tight spots and with the SuperSuite cab , with Stereo, a pleasure to operate over extended periods of time.
 
#17 ·
Case International DX 4o with 6 foot backblade, cab (and stereo) and t c 30 New Holland with home built cab/ heat and whining of the hydrostatic transmission as sound system with 6 foot rear blade. Great for sidewalks at malls and residentials.
 
#18 ·
best sidewalk buggy on the planet

I run a steiner 430 for my sidewalks..... 4wd, it articulates to turn 90 degree corners while staying in its own tracks. I do about a mile and a half of sidewalks in town and from the time I leave until the time I get back it takes me 30 minutes. It will go through 18" of snow and not spin a wheel. I'm a deere guy through and through, but they cannot match a steiner for this application. Highly recommend it!!!!

Michael
 
#19 ·
Check out my video called "Snowplowing Northern Maine John Deere" on YouTube and you can get a great idea what a 32hp Tractor can actually do, this movie shows us plowing about 36" of drifted snow with a 7 1/2 ft Fisher straight blade. Slickest rig ever for doing narrow driveways. Rear Tires loaded with RimGuard and fronts we run chains. NOTHING plows as cheap per hour ....................
 
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#21 ·
FisherVMan;947084 said:
Check out my video called "Snowplowing Northern Maine John Deere" on YouTube and you can get a great idea what a 32hp Tractor can actually do, this movie shows us plowing about 36" of drifted snow with a 7 1/2 ft Fisher straight blade. Slickest rig ever for doing narrow driveways. Rear Tires loaded with RimGuard and fronts we run chains. NOTHING plows as cheap per hour ....................
Post a link.
 
#22 ·
I use a Kubota B3030 with 60 inch blower
 
#23 ·
#24 ·
#25 ·
FisherVMan;948332 said:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=snowplow+northern+maine+john+deere&search_type=&aq=f

I copyed the link out of the http block but it may not work .
IF you just go to youtube and type in Snow Plowing Northern Maine it comes right up and you can get a very good idea how much snow a JD with wollow in with a 7 1/2 ft blade in front of it as we have had alot of positive comments on the movie.............
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I have never had doubts about a tractor w/ blade. If you were to replace the chain with a rigid piece of steel, it will give you some down pressure using the blade also. Mine is not a compact tractor, but it does have a Western truck plow that I converted to use on it. :nod: