I use to send the kid out to shovel the driveway. Had him put the snow in the bed of the pickup.
Never had traction problems and it emptied itself when it was no longer needed.
I use to send the kid out to shovel the driveway. Had him put the snow in the bed of the pickup.
Good to know. I wonder how many people are aware of this. Just downloaded the manual only to discover how much maintenance points are on these machines. Maybe not critical, but there seems to be a lot of grease/lube points. Didn't even realize the auger had a gearcase with oil.GlennG2759 wrote: ↑18 Dec 2020, 17:33 1 drive belt, 1 impeller/auger belt (some have 2).
They both usually last a long time. Easy to replace,
but not in middle of snow storm.

My brother and I have talked about the lessons we learned from our dad on work. Mostly, he taught us the value of work and the need to keep after it until finished. He seldom yelled at us, but you knew if he was displeased with the results. There was always plenty of things to be done and work generally came before any fun.matthew1 wrote: ↑19 Dec 2020, 10:26 The quality of my snow removal machine's latest job was what I can only term "Scantech" level. I had him go back to do a better job and it was still bad. He left the shovel in the yard also. Sigh. I didn't get mad at him. He's a young man, and young men want to eat and play video games, not shovel snow.