I live in an area that gets heavy wet lake effect snow. The reason your snowblower doesn't clear it effectively is there is likely a good sized gap between the impeller blades and the housing. If you close that gap up with an impeller kit, it will drastically improve the performance of your snowblower on wet snow.
so i'm in a part of pennsylvania that probably gets hit by the same storms as you. but depending on wind direction, temperature, etc, it will be worse for you one time, and worse for me another. what i have found works best for heavy snow wet snow is to first put a towel over it to dry it off. after it's dry, use helium to lighten it.
I live in an area that gets heavy wet lake effect snow. The reason your snowblower doesn't clear it effectively is there is likely a good sized gap between the impeller blades and the housing. If you close that gap up with an impeller kit, it will drastically improve the performance of your snowblower on wet snow.
thanks for sharing
Most of the country has no idea what a heavy, wet snow is like. Consider yourself one of a very few still able to witness the four seasons.
Never thought of it that way.
It looks as if you got about 4 inches of snowfall. You have no clue about a real snowstorm!
I am 71 years old, I lived through the great blizzard of 1979 here in New England. Don't tell me about storms young man.
so i'm in a part of pennsylvania that probably gets hit by the same storms as you. but depending on wind direction, temperature, etc, it will be worse for you one time, and worse for me another. what i have found works best for heavy snow wet snow is to first put a towel over it to dry it off. after it's dry, use helium to lighten it.
LOL, nice to hear from you once again.