whelenfan
Well-known member
Does anyone honestly think that the prices of snow throwers will come down during the spring time?
It is a good time to buy a used one.
Watch the garbage at the end of the season, I found an old Toro at the end of winter a few years ago, did a little work on it, cleaned up the carb, used it for two years and sold it on craig's list for $50 then bough a small 4 stroke Craftsman for $90. I have pics of the before and after somewhere, I'll post them if I find them.





You call that thing a snow blower?![]()
Two words to remember:Two Stage
You can buy a good running older Ariens around here for that kind of money in the warm seasons if you look around a little. As far as new, same deal here late fall early winter before the snow really starts seems to be the best time to get a deal on one.
No way. My neighbor has a 9hp two stage monster, while I have a little 5hp single stage. I can do my driveway, sidewalks, and front walks in the time it takes him to do half his driveway--and my driveway is 20' longer! Plus I don't have to shovel afterwards, because it cleans right down to the pavement. Mine cost half as much, takes 1/3 the space, and is less expensive to maintain.
On the rare occasion that we get 12" or more in a single snowfall, I might have to do the job twice--still about the same amount of time as doing it once with the two-stage. And if it's much over 14", he'll have to do it twice anyway, so we're back to square one.![]()
That's what I had when we lived on the NH/MA border. I bought it in the summer for $200 or so. That thing was a tank.
For a Southerner, running the snow blower seemed like a lot of fun the first couple of times. Then I realized it was just like mowing the yard. Except it was 5:00 am, in the teens and snow was blowing back in my face.





running the snow blower seemed like a lot of fun the first couple of times. Then I realized it was just like mowing the yard. Except it was 5:00 am, in the teens and snow was blowing back in my face.
First of all, if you don't enjoy mowing, you need a different mower...
...second of all, snowblowing is better, despite the cold. Besides, you don't need to blow snow every week.

No snowblowers to be seen at the stores. Two stage takes up a lot of space. My 15 year old two stroke Toro cuts through just about anything. We've had a lot of snow in Chicago and it handles anything.
I was wondering as well. I have a 46" 2 stage blower on my yard tractor and it gets down to the pavement.
Those small lightweight blowers are very handy for doing roofs though.
Those small lightweight blowers are very handy for doing roofs though.
A small blower would work great and be safer than trying to shovel your roof.
No way. My neighbor has a 9hp two stage monster, while I have a little 5hp single stage. I can do my driveway, sidewalks, and front walks in the time it takes him to do half his driveway--and my driveway is 20' longer! Plus I don't have to shovel afterwards, because it cleans right down to the pavement. Mine cost half as much, takes 1/3 the space, and is less expensive to maintain.
On the rare occasion that we get 12" or more in a single snowfall, I might have to do the job twice--still about the same amount of time as doing it once with the two-stage. And if it's much over 14", he'll have to do it twice anyway, so we're back to square one.![]()
that wont cut it for the end of the drive way in my area less i want to grab a shovel and start hacking away at it first, in which case whats the point.
Likewise single stages are not cheaper to upkeep since the entire thing is plastic and rubber placed on a light metal chassis and made to wear. Eventually you'll get to the point where its time to throw it in the garbage. A solid 2-stage will last you the rest of your active life with proper maintenance.
by the way if your driveway is actually flat a 2-stage should be leaving no more than a 1/4" of snow on the ground. .