Ill just throw this out there - but dont be afraid to buy a used one from the right kind of seller if its a really good brand. Like i said - my machine is from the 80’s i think, and $800 (i actually bought it from the original yahama dealer that imported it, otherwise it would have been cheaper) got me something extremely reliable that would have likely cost me over $3000 if i bought a new honda in a comparable model.
Just to make a point - notice how a few of the guys that own single stages ALSO own a 2 stage? one bad storm can make you regret a purchase. If youre older, if you have back problems (like me), take that into consideration.
I had a nice old beast 9hp 2 stage craftsman - sold it to buy something new from lowes - a smaller, cheaper, but new - 2 stage Troy Bilt. Used it once - said ‘what the **** did i do’ - sold it to the neighbor, and bought an old tracked 2 stage Yamaha. Happy days were here again...
If you dont mind having to dig yourself out a bit WHEN the big snow hits, or it sits overnight and freezes that one time every year or two - then yea, get a single. Its more convenient esp if you have a garage to keep it in, and you just need to open a door. But if the machine needs to travel from a shed far away, or if your mindset is “i dont wanna touch a shovel” - then consider something bigger as your only machine. Its that, or commit yourself to going out while its still snowing to clear out the driveway halfway through the big storm with a smaller one. just my 2 cents.
Its not like singles stages wont clear a big storm. You’d just have to do it twice. Cause reality is a single will not always do what a 2 stage can. Only you will be the best judge though.
As some of the neighbors are pushing and pulling and pushing again, trying to get their single stage go through something heavy, or what the plows gifted them in the driveway, i walk by with one hand holding down one lever...