by FoolYap » Thu 03 Jan 2008, 11:36:03
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Denny', 'I') can't see why anybody would buy a snow blower for that little saving. I guess I'd feel differently, if clearing snow was twice a week thing all winter, and if we got heavier snow falls..
Do any of you with snow blowers compare the cost and the net benefits from past experience?
I used to own a house with an L-shaped driveway, with a 3' tall stone wall on one side of it, near the house. I didn't own a snowblower, and as I was still in my 20s and in reasonably good shape, never expected that I would own one.
A few years of heavy snowfalls in that house persuaded me otherwise. If all you have is a short, flat driveway, it may be easy to shovel it clear. If your snowfalls are very dry and fluffy, it may be easy to get a big "snowplow" shovel and just push the stuff off. (I still have one like that, from when we lived on a steep paved driveway, with ditch on either side, and it was easy to just push the stuff downhill and then side-to-side into the ditches.)
But the snows we were getting were typically very wet, and up to a foot at a time. It was taking me hours to clear a rather modest length of driveway, because I couldn't just push the stuff to one side. In the worst section of the drive, I had to take a scoop, walk to the 3' wall, and toss it over that. After a few major storms in a row, it would become difficult to fling the shovelfuls far enough to prevent any of it from rolling back downslope and onto the drive again.
So yes, in some circumstances, it is definitely worth it to have a snowblower! When I finally bought one, I was able to easily loft the snow far enough to clear the wall in all but the heaviest falls. And for those, I was able to just blow straight ahead of me, and continue doing so until I reached the far side of the drive, which was not bordered by wall.
Currently, we live on an 800' long gravel driveway, and I'm ~20 years older. Ain't no way I could shovel that sucker clear and still have a full-time job.

I have a 31hp diesel tractor with a blade mounted on loader arms to do the pushing & lifting. If things get so bad that I can't buy 10 gallons of diesel a year to keep that running, then I'm probably going to have plenty of other problems to worry about.
--Steve