Subcompact Tractor Loader Attached Snow Plow! John Deere 1025R

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • First big snow, Tractor Time with Tim uses the Artillian Snow Plow on the 2021 John Deere 1025R to plow out the long driveway. The Original Tractor Cab keeps TTWT warm while Christy captures video in the blizzard!
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Komentáře • 474

  • @earlyriser8998
    @earlyriser8998 Před 2 lety +36

    Christy deserves a medal and day off from snow. You complain about the audio but I am ok with the voiceover. But Christy riding the loader arms and hanging on the cab in that cold and wind is heroic stuff. And look at how the wind is blowing the snow all over the place. Make Christy a hot mug of cocoa.

  • @ritterjon
    @ritterjon Před 2 lety +25

    💥 Despite your audio issue, once again you go above beyond to get great video shots. *Thank you Christy!*
    *Keep on tractoring!*

  • @eosjoe565
    @eosjoe565 Před 2 lety +17

    This video convinced me of one thing, even if I only use it every 5 years or so, nothing beats a front snow blower for removing deeper snow.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety +1

      Yep. Blower is best for deeper snows.

    • @fyrman9092
      @fyrman9092 Před 2 lety +1

      Deep snow for a blower, yes. For the slush dumped by the place at the road, a blade is more beneficial. Hopefully my heavy hitch rear blade arrives soon to help with clean up from this storm.

    • @Mrbink01
      @Mrbink01 Před 2 lety +1

      A 3pt blower for the 5075 and the heated cab would have been great here

    • @eosjoe565
      @eosjoe565 Před 2 lety

      @@fyrman9092 For sure... plus, if that slush has a high salt content from the road it can really cause corrosion on the blower innards if you don't have a means of rinsing things off afterwards. And who has outdoor rinse water in 15-degree weather. Not much to harm on the blade. :-)

  • @truckerray7533
    @truckerray7533 Před 2 lety +1

    You've talked & talked about the spreading of loose gravel on top of a good, solid, 3"inch road baseed driveway over & over. Ive told ya over & over to put down a top layer of at least 3/4" road base on your solid base. pack the 3/4" inch down real good so that when ya have to blade in the winter, you're not loosing any material like ya do with the "LOOSE" gravel. I saw that "loose" tumbling round in the mix of the snow & im just sitting here, shaking my head. . . . .🤦!!! Tractor safe🚜& stay warm. Thanks for sharing the video.

  • @adventureswithkriswesley6433

    Hey Tim I might have a solution to your rock driveway problem. I mounted two trailer jacks with wheels on both sides of the plow behind the blade. You can crank the wheels down and it sets your depth. Then you can crank it up to do bare driveways. Same reason I did wheels on my 3pt snowblower so it doesn’t rip up my gravel drive. Keep up the great work and I look forward to more. If you want pics or more info I’d be happy to share.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety

      Interesting idea.

    • @JeeperJimbo
      @JeeperJimbo Před 2 lety

      Tim I've seen this in action blew me away simple and very effective ! The 3 point rear blower with wheels was genius ! He blows grass with zero damage ... I think his ag tires does more damage lol ...

  • @rfb7117
    @rfb7117 Před 2 lety +1

    Tim, After fighting the snow in WI and a LONG drive for over 20yrs, I gave up on my various snow plows and attached a snowblower to my JD 4720. Along with the difficulty of removing the snow with a lot of gravel, the other problem we encountered with a blade was tunneling on the sides after numerous snowfalls and the snow not melting. The blower works great, just have to keep it up above the gravel. We are biting the bullet and asphalting the drive a section at a time so that it is more affordable. The hard surface is a DREAM to clear and melts in the sunshine. Maybe not a solution for others, but is working great for us!!!!!.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety

      Got estimates of $60,000 3 years ago to concrete our driveway. Would probably be $100,000 now!
      Maybe someday!

  • @johnwythe1409
    @johnwythe1409 Před 2 lety +1

    I don’t know how much freezing and thawing you get there but in MB we pack the first couple of snow falls with the truck. That gives a good base to use the snow blower on or plow with a floating blade.

  • @trentyoung8060
    @trentyoung8060 Před 2 lety +5

    Tim, I have the frontier blade on my 1025R and it’s controlled by summet hydraulic 4 valve kit installed on the rear. This is absolute game changer for me. I love my downward pressure and float feature. My customers like that I can pitch the blade more aggressively and scrape the ice underneath the snow. I don’t think I would like the chain hanging feature for my operations. The fixed blade on the frontier is perfect for me. Howard in Ohio.

  • @nssomedude
    @nssomedude Před 2 lety +3

    Tim, to help keeping the snow from sticking to the plow when warm, spray it with PAM cooking spray. As far as minimizing the amount of gravel you scoop up, try splitting a piece of PVC pipe and slide it onto the bottom of the plow. We may need it again the end of the week (from a fellow Hoosier)

  • @seangill7985
    @seangill7985 Před 2 lety +2

    I have seen people run a length of steel tube as a "cutting edge" to prevent picking up gravel and loose dirt on unpaved surfaces. Cut a slot, slide it over the cutting edge, and weld it on. It won't scrape clean, but it only leaves an inch or so of snow to drive on. Might be worth a try!

  • @Its_just_Dave.
    @Its_just_Dave. Před 2 lety +1

    Great video. I enjoyed watching you clear the snow. Definitely the extra pass is for fun. I enjoy taking extra passes when I blow my driveways. If we get a lot of snow I like to clear a path through my backyard to the meters for when the meter reader guy comes by to check the meters. Not necessary but is fun to play in the snow. Definitely need a cab for my John Deere.

  • @BiffsEquipment
    @BiffsEquipment Před 2 lety +8

    Nice Job Tim! I love mine too! Works great being able to angle the plow on the fly, still my custom made pushbox will always be my favorite plow just because of its simplicity and affectedness but the Artillian plow is my next favorite for sure and does a better job in deep/heavy snow!

  • @jonmoulton3438
    @jonmoulton3438 Před 2 lety +1

    Tim, I picked up a new Hiniker Poly backed 7 ft plow that was new on an online auction but with no mounting brackets. I fabricated the mounting brackets and welded it to a quick attach skid steer plate with 2 double acting cylinders to run the angle off the 3rd function. Using this type of set up I can run the plow in float mode almost 100% of the time because you can set your bucket gauge to keep the bottom of the loader arms from dragging, plus I can put down pressure on the blade to scrape packed snow, I have it on a Kubota MX 6000. Now, I have an asphalt driveway which is a game changer but also plow the neighbors gravel driveway, once the first snow is packed and frozen on that driveway, you can run the float there as well. I also have an 1 1/2" UHMW cutter bar on the plow which helps as well. I can see your struggle with the chain lift type of plow. Thanks for the videos.

  • @rickrebuck6135
    @rickrebuck6135 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video Tim. I really enjoyed it. I bought a John Deere 755 with a 3 point blade for the back of the tractor in 1986. I've plowed a lot of snow in central Pa. since then. I promised myself that by the time I retire I would have a plow on the front of the tractor so I would not have to put up with a craned neck all winter. Well last spring I traded the 755 on a new 2025R with a loader and a direct connect blade. I also purchase an Artilian adapter so I could mount the blade on the loader. 😎 Also purchased a 60" HLA snow pusher. This past fall I retired. 😊 Now I don't have to drive in the snow, just play in it. If it would only snow now😒 . We got 3 inches so far this winter and it was followed up by rain, turning it into watery slop and eventually ice. For the first time I was happy to hear Phil predict 6 more weeks of winter. 🤞 I appreciate your informative channel and all the entertainment that goes with it. Have a great day.

  • @benfinfrock6625
    @benfinfrock6625 Před 2 lety

    Ug, you need a yard guard on that blade. Basically a three inch round pipe with a cut out slot for your cutting blade to insert to. Gets bolted or pinned in each end to hold it on. Floats over gravel or yards without damage. Plus you could use down pressure to back blade in front of garages etc.

  • @CptBlackbeardlives
    @CptBlackbeardlives Před 2 lety

    Been a long time since we've had a bad winter like we had every year in the 70's and 80's.
    Back then you got storm after storm with no melting in between so you had to push the first snow as far back as possible so hopefully by the last storm you could still have one narrow lane open.

  • @rlwdaman1
    @rlwdaman1 Před 2 lety

    Do not apologize for any issues.... Still a great video and just enjoy riding along in the cab watching the plowing. Have always grown up with a plow mount d to the front of garden tractors with chains and a walk behind snowblower for our snow removal here in NW PA.

  • @supporterofeverythingyouli6255

    I like that plow. I took my 3-point rear mount 6 ft. county line blade that I purchased from tractor supply and moved it to the front with an adapter bracket that I purchased, for moving around three-point implements with the loader also has the receiver hitch. Centered an 8-foot piece of rubber belting on it dropping it a half inch below the cutting-edge. Definitely a homemade rig and setup that has limitations but I love it. Have a great day!

    • @jimnh2able
      @jimnh2able Před 2 lety

      where did you get the adapter? I would like that setup

  • @osagejon8972
    @osagejon8972 Před 2 lety +2

    I have an old 8' fischer plow I made a mount for the loader of my Kubota L3901. It's a bit on the big side for the tractor but it handles it fairly well. Two nice things about loader mount is being able to pile snow high as you said and that you have pretty much a six way blade by how you angle and use the curl cylinders. I have used it for light stone grading and loose dirt in the summer.

  • @rodbagley1686
    @rodbagley1686 Před 2 lety

    I have the Frontier loader mounted blade on my 1025. I do like being able to pile the snow way up high. Takes practice using the tilt function. Too much forward tilt digs in. Tilt back too much and the loader arms rub the ground. Need to find the happy middle ground. I have the same problem as you Tim. If I angle the blade right tractor slides left and vice versa. I do not have any extra weights except fir the backhoe hanging off the back. R4 tires seem to work just fine. Still can't beat a tractor mounted front snowblower in the deep snow. I still think Jon from A Ritter Bit Will Do has the right idea. He is my hero when it comes to snow removal. Thanks for the hours you put in so I can learn from you and the rest of the tractor fanatics! Hope to see you at the show in Feb.

  • @jonespy9508
    @jonespy9508 Před 2 lety

    There is a great product for solving your rock problem- blacktop! My driveway is 1/4 mile and I struggled plowing too. This is my first year with blacktop and it's heavenly!

  • @Clydedude1
    @Clydedude1 Před 2 lety +1

    Tim,
    You mentioned that the front end moved on you with the blade angled. Then I noticed your front weight bracket was empty. I have the same setup minus the cab and adding the 42# weights to the front really helps the steering. We have had a lot of significant, heavy/wet snowfalls this year so I have been experimenting with the Artilian setup. It is my first season with it and I like it so far. It definitely has a learning curve if you are used to a frame mounted plow.

  • @MrSparks701
    @MrSparks701 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Christy!

  • @southlakelife
    @southlakelife Před 2 lety +7

    Issues aside great video time and thanks for posting! There's just no easy way to plow a gravel driveway. I've tried everything myself. I resorted to installing casters on the backside of my plow to help it float above the gravel once adjusted. Even then, if the ground is soft enough, there is so much weight on the casters that they sink. Asphalt isn't in the budget for a driveway of our size right now.

    • @eosjoe565
      @eosjoe565 Před 2 lety +4

      After 50 years of plowing a gravel driveway the only solution I have found if you HAVE to plow is to use a rear blade and push backwards against the curved side of the blade. This pushes the snow fine but minimizes the amount of rocks and gravel that is dug up. I also put fiberglass driveway markers along the edges where the gravel meets the grass and then never push anything past the markers. Since I use a blower for large snows and only use the blade for small snows I don't have issues with huge piles of snow along the sides of my driveway.

    • @drgnfr20
      @drgnfr20 Před 2 lety +2

      @@eosjoe565 Usually i use my blade backwards for the first 2 or so snowfalls this leaves a nice base that freezes into the rocks and makes a flat surface to plow the rest of the season. Eventually ill have a blower maybe =(

  • @pjs5191
    @pjs5191 Před 2 lety

    Even though we didn’t get much down here in Eville I still got out on the tractor and pushed some around home.
    My uncle who was in town from Indy this weekend said he shoveled 3 times, he figured ended up with 10-12”.

  • @daddio7249
    @daddio7249 Před 2 lety

    Living in Florida we do not worry about snow. Today it is in the 50's with a cold mist. For drive ways we use shell rock or asphalt road grind. They both pack down and leave a smooth surface. Here rocks and gravel are expensive.

  • @douglasstovall2395
    @douglasstovall2395 Před 2 lety +1

    I use my regular road blade to push the snow on my gravel driveway (1500 ft.) but I attached two detachable 8" swivel wheels on the back of the blade, one on either side. Using the top link, I can adjust the amount of clearance so as to not disturb the gravel. Works very well. One pass down and back and I'm done! A few of my friends have used my idea and really liked it. Solid wheels work best. Pneumatic tires bounce too much and give a wash board effect. Actually, I go backwards so I'm not riding in unplowed snow and the snow doesn't gather under the tractor.

  • @cwolff5119
    @cwolff5119 Před 2 lety +2

    Get a 72” fel mounted blade, add Artillian extensions, a roll-over guard, and gauge wheels. I make thick plastic edges.
    Solutions vary by the kind of snow you get and where you’re plowing. Blowers don’t handle wet snow well. Plowing 2 miles of road is different than plowing a gravel driveway.

    • @cwolf8841
      @cwolf8841 Před 2 lety +1

      I had zero problems plowing like this ....float works well....plowing a mile of secondary road. Make sure the blade is not locked.....there are little surprises in the road.....although rare.

  • @henrymeinzer392
    @henrymeinzer392 Před 2 lety

    The audio is just fine. Christy gets a hold medal for recording. .years back I tried a loader mounted blade. It was ok . I thought it would be faster. Now days I use a front mount 59" snow blower.have a 400 ft long drive in Western NY. Get that snow out of the way.

  • @denisewildfortune4058
    @denisewildfortune4058 Před 2 lety

    Tim, I have a 300 ft driveway plus spur road to my barn and a large area connecting them to my garage and it's all gravel with fines. When I had the driveway renewed with fines and then compacted with a vibrating roller, my drive was smooth and hard come winter. This allows me to run a front-mounted snowblower and a Woods rear blade with huge mushroom skids that protect my driveway. I did replace the plastic impeller (lose bushing) on my snowblower with a steel one and once in a great while break a shear pin, I have to say that I've got the best setup I can get for the conditions I face in Maine. Even when the fines wash out of the drive a bit, the gravel is mostly frozen in place not to be a big headache. Thanks for another good video and keep the hot chocolate coming for Christie!

  • @dangerrangerlstc
    @dangerrangerlstc Před 2 lety

    One trick i learned from my college grounds maintenance crew was before it snows, go down your driveway and sidewalk and drive wooden stakes along the edge. Helps show where gravel or pavement stops and grass begins. You get that drifting snow and its hard to tell where the driveway is. The wood would snap off if hit, keeping it from damaging vehicles. Could use metal t-posts or rebar if you wanted.

  • @josephdriscoll8527
    @josephdriscoll8527 Před 2 lety

    Tim, spray silicone is the best I spray my whole plow to keep snow from sticking and don't bring in snow to the shop .I have a 80" Frontier all angle that replaces the bucket their is a learning curve but over the years I'm not much of a sod buster for my yard, great fit 16" snow no issues with 3320 with Femco heat Houser that sends the engine heat to me while the banks go up over 8' 😃

  • @Sundancer268
    @Sundancer268 Před 2 lety +1

    This video convinces me that I made the right decision to go with the Heated TekTite Cab and 47" JD Front Mounted Blower. Granted it is not as fast as a blade, but the cab is warm and the snow gets moved a lot further away from the cleared area. Of course you southerners only get that kind of snow once in a great while, living in the Lake Effect Area of Northern Michigan, I see it quite often and would run out of places near the house to pile that much snow. I agree with Christy, I hate the cold and I was born here, I wish I could be warm all the time, but having lived in the Notfolk area, I also hate the heat and Humidity more, so I guess I am stuck. Great video by the way. As for the warm blade, that is why I store my 1026R and front blower in the NON-heated Garage.

  • @philsmock4943
    @philsmock4943 Před 2 lety

    Even though you had issues with the audio you still put together a good video for us to watch. Thanks for taking the time and going out in the cold.

  • @Kcolby47
    @Kcolby47 Před 2 lety

    I enjoyed and related to your video, especially after I had cleared around here on day one with those conditions, albeit in my cab tractor…ahhhh! It’s refreshing how you shared the “trials and tribulations” of doing videos in those conditions. I respect the time and effort it takes to produce this content to the standards you set. And frankly, I probably would not have known the differences/problems had you not shared them with us. I appreciate your transparency and giving us a glimpse “behind the scenes”. It reflects well on you and Christy. Thanks and blessings.

  • @jeremybilleb1926
    @jeremybilleb1926 Před 2 lety

    We live in north west Illinois and we have a 54" front mounted snowblower and recently bought a 52" rotary broom since I already have all the attaching parts. The snowblower is great for the deep snow and I find I use the broom A LOT! Way more than I ever had imagined. Best part is I can use it to clean the rocks out of my yard in the spring and with almost no raking! Love the video's, keep them coming!

  • @ddelano7408
    @ddelano7408 Před 2 lety +1

    My hat is off to Christy for what she goes through to bring us your great videos! Thank you Christy! I hope you treated her to some hot chocolate and a cheeseburger to warm her up after the shoot!😃

  • @RCPSU4
    @RCPSU4 Před 2 lety

    You all got more than we did, and hopefully no ice. The same storm put down roughly 1/4" of ice here in PA along with about 4" of snow. Thank goodness you didn't get the 2038 or the Kubota out because I can only imagine how miserable it would've been for both of you. I almost expected to see a rear blade in use for the top end of the driveway, and some additional ballast. On the topic of avoiding rocks/dirt being picked up, using a snowblower on gravel is not fun since you've got to angle the chute downward to avoid rocks being thrown real far. Been there before with a walk behind unit. It was hard to avoid when we just shoveled our small driveway.

  • @WDADVG
    @WDADVG Před 2 lety

    Great video. I like to push that snow with the rocks and dirt back onto the driveway before it completely melts so that I don't have a lot of cleanup in the spring. Congratulations on the 1st Place Trophy.

  • @tombarnes1871
    @tombarnes1871 Před 2 lety

    Good Evening Christy & Tim, The things our wives will do to support their husbands!! Well done Miss Christy!!! Kinda dangerous though!!
    I have a float on my Kubota B 8200. As you are aware a float allows the blade to ride the contour of the land, much better than a fixed blade. I do not experience tear out on my drive. I had a local fabricator make an extension for the top of my blade which I bolted on. He allows the snow to curl a bit more so in deeper snow, it does not come over the top; works well. I have found if I use my blade or the front bucket on my B 3350 when the snow gets 6 inches deep in a major storm that’s a good time to plow as it’s easier to push back. Yes, the draw back is multiple times plowing. I would suggest adding some weight plates to the rear might have helped to balance things out.
    Take Miss Christy out for diner in a fancy expensive restaurant for her efforts and risk taking!!! Hope this helps someone!

  • @jddriver9565
    @jddriver9565 Před 2 lety

    I love snow and those snowvideos, i can´t get enough of them, thanks!:)

  • @jonathandemont3758
    @jonathandemont3758 Před 2 lety

    I have a 1025R and for winter it’s set up with a 72” HLA snow pusher and rear mount blower. I use my tractor as a secondary snow removal device (I have a 2019 Ram 2500 Cummins with a Boss v plow) for the bulk of the work. I use my Deere for relocating or getting at tight areas. It’s also worked well when my truck was out of commission. Having a blower really helps for the deep stuff. Keep up the great videos guys!

  • @28cruzin
    @28cruzin Před 2 lety

    Snow will stick to a cold blade just like a warm blade. The trick I learned back in the 70"s was keeping a heavy coat of car wax on the blade. Sometimes more coats of wax are needed during the plowing season. Being naturally lazy I consulted another lazy, but older and more experienced, gentleman. His solution was to wipe down his blade with an oily rag before a storm. That took too much effort for me, so I resorted to spray silicone. Faster and easier. seems to last longer, too. I have Johny's older big brother. I call him agent 955. I'm not only lazy, I'm cheap too. I use my grader blade to move snow. We had about 20" last week and I waited until the following day. Not smart. I had the power to push but the traction was poor. Maybe next year I'll spring for a plow. Great video and the voice over was fine. Be careful with Christi. She's not easy to replace. Next time let her drive and you hang off the tractor filming. LOL. See you two in the next one. Dave

  • @brettkuykendall2485
    @brettkuykendall2485 Před 2 lety

    I used my 1025R to move snow for the first time. I live in Central Illinois where we got 12”+ of snow and plenty of drifting. I used the edge tamers on the loader to dig out big drifts and then drove in reverse with the rear blade facing backwards in an angle to push the snow. I did move some gravel off the driveway at first until I got a good height set on the rear blade. I live in the country and my driveway is very long but this set up made clearing the snow very quick and easy.

  • @PeterHonig.
    @PeterHonig. Před 2 lety

    A bit of silicone lubricant spray on the plow blade will keep the snow from sticking. Great for snow blowers and hand shovels as well.

  • @patroberson2592
    @patroberson2592 Před 2 lety

    Loved watching the video from inside the warm, cozy house! ‘Hope Christy has thawed out.

  • @WichhartAcres
    @WichhartAcres Před 2 lety

    That was a lot of snow! The angle blade was must! A pusher like I have would have just filled up too quick would cause the tractor to get stuck. Thanks for posting!

  • @timraber6575
    @timraber6575 Před 2 lety

    I’m glad you got your big snow so you could demonstrate that blade. I moved snow with a skid steer with just the bucket back in my working days. So much fun till it all melted off and I had to fill in the mess I had made. I just glad we didn’t get that much snow here in western Kentucky. I think you the audio on your videos have been great. I can watch some shaky video, but sound makes it watchable. Cold and snowy conditions just test every piece of tech equipment. Christy is a trooper as producer, director and editor, cook. Looking forward to the cheeseburger. I may even bring my wife along…….

  • @aprilgeneric8027
    @aprilgeneric8027 Před 2 lety

    two tips for any one plowing, from a professional plow driver: to save time and money wax your plow before use, not every time, just when you see what the snow is doing to tim, clinging to the plow, before next use give it a good coat of swix skii spray wax for the temperature it is, determines the stickiness of the snow or go to the dollar store get several long thin candles or a fat thick one, and tip the plow back in your over head shelter or in the shed and hold that candle at the highest point of the plow and heat up that candle til it melts and rub it on the plow down to up while heating it to melting and melt a light coat of wax onto the plow. normally i wait for the hottest part of summer and lay the plow down and tape the candles to the high points and let the heat and sun do the work and really get a good soaking into the pores, i also do this for the chute slides on the snow blowers if you want to do it tot he snow blowers also.
    wax repels water and won't let water bond to the surface, it does wear off with useage. haven't tried car wax yet.
    short of using candle wax tip #2 before use and your surface is dry and warm, use cooking spray like pam...like the wax is serves the same purpose and can be applied on the spot before each use, be warned, it's effects don't last as long so your mileage will vary vs wax.
    #3 let your snow equipment sit in out door temperature for atleast 30 minutes so that the heat it retained doesn't melt and bond snow to it as it melts and refreezes into ice.
    Christy is the best camera stabilizer i can see how much vibration and shaking and sway just by watching the cab of the tractor which already reduces alot of vibration compared to the tractor frame she's standing on. great work camera lady! i personally like the voice overs as i don't need the full upclose and personal volume of the tractor engine, which is still good to hear some what so we can understand when the motor and machine strain happens and watch what's going on to cause it. the ability to hear this is the key to understanding a machines limitations.
    Tim, looking at all the melt areas in this video take pictures and look at them in the summer to see where your drainage and rain issues are going to be points of origin and worst areas of offense causing the run off problems. with that said, don't change anything by those pine trees, that is perfect as those trees are growing still even in the middle of winter evidence is the fact they still have green in their needles for photosynthesis, evergreens still need watering even in the winter! just don't let them drown which is when the soil becomes and stays mud for over an hour per day. being muddy for 2-3 days every once in a great while won't hurt them, being muddy for a week or two will kill them, i guess the roots need to breathe too, and it will take a month before you notice they have died the damage will show by brown starting to color the needles, that's when it's already too late the water has either crippled the tree for life or it's not going to make it
    for end of the road rock, or just rock driveways in general i first pack the rock down hard and smooth before temps drop into the 30's then when snow comes leave an 1" of snow over it and wait for it to semi melt and freeze into the rock before i put my skid shoes to 1/4" above which is pretty level for rock driveways with out peeling and destroying the frozen rock surface layer which will help keep the rocks out of the yard.
    the whole problem you're having is the loader arms don't float like a pick up trucks plow will just gravity drag. john deere really messed this ability up since the 1970's. you need a separate bracket that has bottom pivot ability or the 400 series lawn tractor snow blower 4 lift bar arms that just has a hydro ram cylinder to set the lifted height, unlike the new quick hitch stuff which eliminated that ability 100%
    also never pile snow up by a building you need to clear it away from. at some point you're going to have a very thin layer of ice and it will cause you to crash either into the doors or the walls which will be a costly mistake of $3000-$7000 to fix and that is well down the road of after letting old man winter into your building probably for several days to several weeks which can lead to a whole host of other damages inside such as water and vermin or frozen pipe damage.
    always pull the snow atleast machine length +1/2 machine length away. i had a guy hit black ice with a skid steer at BAE defense contractor and struck the building so hard and damaged it so badly a snow drift of 4 feet high formed inside within an hour almost up to the cannon barrel of the paladin artillery piece they were working on inside from a 4-6" gap he created in the block exterior to interior wall and up about 12' into the steel siding portion of the building. you are close enough to your brick house wall, all your meals will probably be from fast food and eaten in the motel you'll be staying at.

  • @slowride55
    @slowride55 Před 2 lety +1

    I have an L3010 Kubota with a 7’ land pride rear blade. I have a long gravel driveway and the only way I have found to push the snow without tearing up the gravel is pushing backwards with the back side of the blade.

  • @miker8915
    @miker8915 Před 2 lety

    Great video, no worries about the audio, if you didn't let us know I would not have noticed. You got a ton of snow! Great plowing. Thanks again for all your great videos!! Stay warm

  • @richardhowe6218
    @richardhowe6218 Před 2 lety

    I have a Yanmar with a loader attached plow. It has a backhoe on it. I couldn't use the float with the back hoe on it. The front end would come up in the air. I took the back hoe off. Then the rear wheels didn't have any traction. I built a rear platform for it. I have pails of sand on the back for ballast. Now, I can use the float and still have steering. I adjusted the feet on the plow so that it would leave about 1 inch of snow. I also put chains on the rear tires. It's an excellent combination. I also put an FM radio on it so I had something to listen to while I'm plowing.

  • @ericlaker1983
    @ericlaker1983 Před 2 lety +1

    Christy is pretty amazing Tim. I know i think allot of my wife the same. But you know she does care about you enough to do such a job. You guys are pretty great. Keep up the fun adventures up and enjoy each other as long as you can. Thank you fur best content.

  • @StanleyGrant13
    @StanleyGrant13 Před 10 měsíci

    I have a 4066R with a loader mounted plow. I run 3 miles of gravel/dirt, and I’ve found the best config is to combine it with a rear blade at the same time. I set my loader about 2-3” above the gravel surface to move the bulk of the snow. I angle the rear blade in the same direction, but lower it all the way down and then raise it just a smidge so it is barely above the gravel surface. The end result is a front blade that never hits the ground, and it moves the bulk of the snow. The rear blade behind just ticks the ground ever so often, and moves the remaining snow off to give the road a nice finish. Once we have a hard pack of snow I can then lower the rear blade all the way.
    That config works pretty well for me because I have long straight-aways and don’t need to make many adjustments. If I was in shorter spaces and needed to continually raise/lower, it would be more cumbersome since I’d have to constantly adjust both front and back blade heights and angles. Around the house where there’s more confined spaces I switch to my bucket with edge tamers.

  • @k6outdoors
    @k6outdoors Před 2 lety

    We missed that snow storm here in Iowa! Edge tamers do work well but with that much snow and driveway it would take some time! Great GoPro action, i have 2 of them myself and have always been impressed. Incase you missed it they did just release some cold weather batteries which are supposed to help with the life is cold weather, Stay warm. -Kyle

  • @ricwasher9349
    @ricwasher9349 Před 2 lety +1

    I have a Frontier Blade, AF10e I think. I do use it in float position, works really well. I use the bucket with edge tamers (thank you TTWT for those) until my driveway is frozen, then switch to the blade for the rest of the season. I use to use an ATV for plowing, I’m so much happier with the tractor and plow. I prefer it to snow blowing (did that for a few years). I do have a grade to my driveway and I have to plow down it or I spin tires a lot. Good video even with the sound issues, although I was confused by some of your choices on pushing direction/location, but you know your driveway better then I!

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety +1

      Compared to you, I’m an amateur. No idea the best place to push.

  • @TL-ii4tb
    @TL-ii4tb Před 2 lety

    I’ve enjoyed all your videos and the test you’ve you put the 1025r thru. I just got my 21’ 1025r tlb with r14s a month ago and really enjoying it. We just got 8” ish of snow and I just used the 53” bucket and it worked great on gravel drive. It worked so well I’m sure I won’t ever buy a snow attachment because the bucket is so versatile. Thanks again and Continue to Rest in our Savior!

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety +1

      Consider adding edge tamers. Edgetamer.com use code Ttwt for a five percent discount. Helps to keep you from digging in….inexpensive!
      We will show in an upcoming episode.

  • @jeanvaljohn3921
    @jeanvaljohn3921 Před 2 lety

    Next year Iam going to need a big ole snow blower tossing that snow thirty or forty feet out of the way.
    This giant pile stuff is for the birds
    Thanks for the good vid

  • @dirkbikey5531
    @dirkbikey5531 Před 2 lety

    Your video is still better than I will ever make! I had a Tar River loader attached snow blade for my 2025r. Had is the key word! Your correct about it being way out front. I felt like Mr Toad's wild ride every time I used it. 😄 The tar river has a 2 pivot point mount and you could add down force, but that made the steering worse with no grip on the front tires. And if you set it to float it would want to dig in, its just to far out to have much control. I'm lucky my drive is all concrete. I also had a lot of front end bouncing with all that weight out front. If you can add as much weight your front axle will handle it helps. I went a different route and bought a Kubota F2690 with a push blade and the snow blower and 72" mower. You can also get a broom and leaf blower too. If only I got lucky like you, and get a big snow storm I will be a happy guy.

  • @FelipeColby
    @FelipeColby Před 2 lety

    You made lemonade, and quite good lemonade. The errors/issues only keep it real and more relatable.
    And you did it safely in my book. I suppose to be 100% safe the video would have to be inside with both of you reading a book.

  • @billvandorn5332
    @billvandorn5332 Před 2 lety

    I try and spray silicone on my blades before the storm. It helps for a while till it wears off. Some folks have suggested Pam but I haven't tried it yet

  • @ralphjelomono9068
    @ralphjelomono9068 Před 2 lety

    Great video Tim even without real time audio. I am sure you were happy to have the cab on Johnny. Was impressed on how well it handled the snow drifts. I got cold just watching. I agree with Christy and not a fan of cold weather.

  • @tractorstrailsandlivingfree

    It's amazing what your outlook about an impending snowstorm is when you have a 4 way hydraulic plow on a tractor compared to when all you have is a shovel.

  • @glenncollins1417
    @glenncollins1417 Před 2 lety

    Was a good storm spent all Thursday clearing till 1 AM Friday morning a quick nap. Pretty much rinse and repeat thru Saturday evening.
    Plow, snow box for most in the end hand to hook up the blower for a couple jobs where couldn't plow due to inside closed fences with huge drifts had to move it up and over get it out of the way.

  • @orgeirjonsson3014
    @orgeirjonsson3014 Před 2 lety

    Great camera job Christy 😀

  • @leokelly359
    @leokelly359 Před 2 lety

    I find that when using my rear blade with skid feet set lower than the blade works great for me and not dispersing gravel all over between that , my heated cab and my snow push I'm pretty well set up. spent 6 hrs clearing my drive and neighbors driveway numerous times

  • @wesleyjackson1036
    @wesleyjackson1036 Před 2 lety

    Hi Tim,
    A note to tuck away for the spring. I see your shelter logic seems to have grown some mold on the outside. I live in a river valley and battle it constantly. I've found a product called Wet and Forget does a great job and not too labor intensive. Spray it on and leave it, it takes a couple weeks and the mold goes away for almost a full 12 months.

  • @gsparrowpepin
    @gsparrowpepin Před 2 lety

    Hey Tim! Great video. I have a 1025R with a Frontier loader mount blade. I use the Artillian Diverter kit for 3rd function angling. I can say that the float works brilliantly. The key with the floating is getting the curl in the right place, if you are too curled/not curled enough you can either dig in or not scrape well. Once you get the hang of it though, the down pressure works very well and you have the skid plates which you can set to ensure you don't dig in. It's also often helpful to have that pressure when you are trying to scrape any of the icier storms. All that being said, I think if you were in a place where your driveway doesn't freeze solid you might get yourself into trouble. Where we are, the gravel freezes solid and you can really scrape along without any worries of digging in. You have to be much more careful in the spring/early winter storms when the ground is softer, but that seems to be true for the Artillian too based on your comments about the end of the driveway. Keep up the great work. Your video makes me wish I had a cab...

  • @ATR-42
    @ATR-42 Před 2 lety

    Outstanding Cinematography Emmy for Christy!!

  • @billweaver3114
    @billweaver3114 Před 2 lety

    Had fun watching you have some fun plowing your drive way we had the same thing as far as snow and I find myself wishing that I had a tractor cuz we live out in the country all though we don't have a huge driveway it's still to big for me to shovel we ended up having my father-in-law come down and clear it thankfully he was able to God bless you and your family look forward to seeing your next video

  • @jasone679
    @jasone679 Před 2 lety

    Tim, I'm glad to hear you and Christy have recovered from Covid. As for plowing snow, I'm not a fan just because I've never figured out how to not get stone in the yard, at least until there is a frozen snowpack on the driveway. You might consider putting up snow fence for the areas that always drift, it does help although I rarely get around to putting it up.

  • @charlesmach7511
    @charlesmach7511 Před 2 lety

    I have a 1025 and I built a 6' loader mounted blade with a hydraulic blade swivel and I put a 3/16" thick piece of plastic on the blade surface so no snow sticks. I plow in the float mode on blacktop and gravel drives. I started with a steel cutting edge and put to much gravel in the yard. 2 years ago I purchased a 4' x 6' x 3/4" thick cattle mat from Tractor Supply and cut off a 8" thick strip and installed it under my cutting edge with the bolt holes down the middle so I can flip it when it wears out. This rubber edge sticks 2" lower than the steel edge so it rolls back just alittle and acts like a squeege on the blacktop and it rolls over the gravel leaving very little in the grass. I am on my 2nd year plowing with this and it has only rounded the edge of the mat and now works even better. Best thing is I can cut 5 more 8" strips out of the mat if I ever wear this one out, It takes me about 2 hours to plow 4 driveways. I would recommend this mat to your readers as it cost me $50 for the mat and i will never use it up in my lifetime.

  • @matthewkirichkow5279
    @matthewkirichkow5279 Před 2 lety

    I have a .3 tenths long driveway. I learned ling ago to start the season out with a good snow pack to protect the gravel fro the blade. I generally have an inch on top the gravel. This took care of having to buy gravel every few years.

  • @Mike-mn9xo
    @Mike-mn9xo Před 2 lety

    Love my frontier blade on my 1025r. Did great in this blizzard. Works great in float . Absolutely horrible in gravel even with feet .

  • @christophersiano969
    @christophersiano969 Před 2 lety

    Still say an inverted blower on the 3-point is still the cat's meow of snow removal.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety

      Wouldn’t work very well in this deep snow on a 1025r. Snow too deep for the little guy to drive through.

    • @christophersiano969
      @christophersiano969 Před 2 lety

      @@TractorTimewithTim True, but you have other options than the 1025. I'm actually shocked at just how deep I can drive through. Unlike the plow, the blower does not build up much drag. That said, I do have to drive a bit slower with the blower than a plow as it can only eat snow so fast. I also find that I don't tend to toss many rocks from my 1/4 mile gravel drive. I have the cutting edge about 1/4" high. This leaves a small coating, but it tends to melt off once the sun shines again.
      BTW, I can respect Christy's aversion to the cold. When it's real cold, I put my Motorcycle heated liners under my snow clothes and use an SAE connector I added to the tractor to stay warm. The MC heated gloves are weather resistant too, so that works. I don't run the heated socks as I don't need them, but it's an option for sure. I'm running a gas powered generator, so why not? Not as comfy as a full cab, but other than the occasional wind blowing the snow across my face, I find it very cozy and I feel that you can see much better in an open station. If I have to hop off, I just unplug for a moment. Of course, to use this, she would have to be operating the tractor. Or riding a jump seat or something. (^_^)

  • @markledbetter8982
    @markledbetter8982 Před 2 lety

    As much as I know you hate this happening. I really think this shows really how personal you make the videos. You tell everything about making the videos everything you do. Like your videos you don’t hope you know I really appreciate it. Thanks so much look forward to the next video

  • @josephsierra7295
    @josephsierra7295 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Tim and Chisty. That was very good footage of the front mounted blade considering the overall situation. Honestly very impressed by how Jonny handled that amount of snow over that distance with a blade. Looks like you may have been better served by the blower? Unfortunately stone cleanup remains a fact of life regardless of what we use. Cleanup required in the Spring unless we have paved ways. Thanks for sharing!

  • @montymatth2409
    @montymatth2409 Před 2 lety

    Stay safe in this storm and thanks for the video Tim and Christy

  • @edstevens9357
    @edstevens9357 Před 2 lety +1

    We run a work saver snow pusher with rubber cutting edge and a 48 inch snow blower on the back or the weight box with 400 pounds in it. Best part is we put chains on all four wheels. If I had a redo the HLA snowpusher would have been a better choice

  • @mikekowal4944
    @mikekowal4944 Před 2 lety

    Welcome to my world ..lol.... we have snow like that all winter.. I love my rear snowblower so I can use my loader when I need it. Things are changing! Your friend from Manitoba!!

  • @ronaldkorte8094
    @ronaldkorte8094 Před 2 lety

    You will probably have a lot of fun getting your rocks back in your driveway in the spring. Been there and done that. This year with a edge tamer on each side of my bucket I added one in the middle and floated.. I don't think any rocks (or very few) got moved. The setup worked well for me, even though I had to move a lot of snow with my bucket, and sometimes after pushing a lot of snow in front of me my front wheels lifted and I lost direction control. Wishing for the old days when we had separate brakes. Enjoy your videos, keep up the good videos.

  • @gregoryflewellyn6369
    @gregoryflewellyn6369 Před 2 lety

    Makes getting snow look fun,good job!

  • @jackholt7418
    @jackholt7418 Před 2 lety

    Hey Tim good video up here in Canada I use a Tecktite cab. It is heated with front wiper. Both doors come off brass pins very easily for my summer air conditioning. I don't have a backhoe but the back glass comes out with hand screws so the cab is backhoe compatible. These cabs are made in Manitoba Canada very nice. They come in orange green and red. They also have two sets of LED lights mounted front and back on the roof. I also use John deere's 54-in snowblower which will go through a two or three foot drift like butter provided it's not wet. I use a 1023e for all of this. Anyways I'm a big fan you've taught me all I know about tractors including greasing transmission fluid changing oil changing etc. Your videos are greatly appreciated.

  • @nfisheremti
    @nfisheremti Před 2 lety

    Christy is a real trooper. I use that cheap ceramic car paint coating, like they show on some youtube ads. I get a bottle at walmart for $8, and spray it all around the inside of my 3pt snow blower. Nothing sticks. I haven't tried it on a blade, but it works well in the chute, fan, and auger. It might work on your blade too.

  • @matt56849
    @matt56849 Před 2 lety

    What I did with my 8’ blade on my pickup is take a piece of 2” ID sch 40 well pipe, cut a slot the width of my cutting edge, welded tabs on the ends, and then slide it over the top of the cutting edge with the tabs to bolt it onto the blade so it doesn’t fall off. I can send you a picture of it so you can see what I mean. I got the idea from a snow plowing forum when I originally bought my blade.

  • @joshm2215
    @joshm2215 Před 2 lety

    I thought it was a job well done with a set of difficult circumstances! You made lemonade out of lemons.
    Also…Love that Oliver plow in some of your shots 😀

  • @billvandorn5332
    @billvandorn5332 Před 2 lety

    Although it was just for fun, making that extra pass is crucial to be prepared for the next snow storm so you have a place to put it instead of a frozen pile in your way :-)

  • @poolman158
    @poolman158 Před 2 lety +2

    I use the edge tamers on my 3025e and look forward to the comparison of the fork blade, snow pusher, and bucket with edge tamers. 🙂

  • @curtwhite876
    @curtwhite876 Před 2 lety +1

    A great video in spite of, and in some ways because of the technical challenges. I am sure many appreciate your openness about the technical challenges related to producing your great content.
    I would think Artillian could adjust the angle of the plow bracket down on the mounting end and up on the blade end so you could use the float function.

  • @Hilltopangler
    @Hilltopangler Před 2 lety

    Good video even though you had audio issues. Stay warm and happy plowing!

  • @ranger6x660
    @ranger6x660 Před 2 lety

    Tim the only way I have limited the amount of stone in my yard is get a good snow base on my driveway from the first snow fall.
    I love my open station 33R but when it comes to plowing snow my Polaris Ranger 6x6 does a better job and is quicker. I use my 33R to push piles back. We have about 4’ on the ground and 8’ tall piles of snow everywhere.
    I ordered studs to put in my R4 tires for better traction on ice.
    Another good video guy’s thanks for sharing.

  • @calebackerman2363
    @calebackerman2363 Před 2 lety

    I've heard that a piece of pipe with a slot cut in it put over the cutting edge helps to save grass and gravel and keep it from scraping up loose driveways although I've never tried it myself.

  • @allthingsjonny4840
    @allthingsjonny4840 Před 2 lety

    I can’t live without my plow. Plain and simple. Great vid Tim.

  • @RossOnTheLand
    @RossOnTheLand Před 2 lety +1

    That plow does a good job! Bring it up here to Ontario Canada if you'd like more practice. :) I'm thinking of getting the Rode 2 as well, because I'm only using the DJI audio and I would like better audio. Thanks for showing us your snow video. Keep warm.

  • @paulmatott8331
    @paulmatott8331 Před 2 lety

    I have a homemade plow that I set up with a chain and I found that the plow would change angle . As the loader arms would go up and down it would move the blade up and down . So I fixed it so it could not move and now I can use the float . It works a lot better I can set the angle of the blade and it stays at that angle

  • @troyeager8877
    @troyeager8877 Před 2 lety

    I dread picking gravel up in the spring. So I have designated stopping points so I only have 3 areas to rake up. I use a 400 Suzuki eiger 4x4 to plow with.

  • @gregorykiest3683
    @gregorykiest3683 Před 2 lety

    I think you worry too much about cameras and audio. Great to see machines working. ❤️

  • @waltermattson1730
    @waltermattson1730 Před 2 lety

    I was pretty impressed with the way the 1025 pushed the snow.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  Před 2 lety

      Yea. Works pretty well. I think you’ll like the direct attach better…coming in a video soon…a few days.

  • @timkd5vmv583
    @timkd5vmv583 Před 2 lety

    Great video regardless of the audio issues.
    We had an ice event here in Northwest Mississippi.
    Stay safe and God Bless.
    The Other Tim with Tractors.