I can across these pics and figured some of you might find it interesting.
Before I got my tractor or ATV, moving the wood piles was a manual affair (i.e. wheel barrow). Not bad when the ground was dry. But in the mud season here in NH, it was a PITA. I got the idea from a picture in a magazine (can't remember which) many years ago.
The snowblower is a Toro PowerShift 1132. It has a real transmission, not a friction disc. Very stout. I simply removed the front auger housing (6 bolts and one belt...5 minute job). I fabricated a frame and bracket to bolt to the tractor unit using the same 6 bolt holes. Added a couple of 10" diameter pneumatic casters in the front and a wood box. Transformed into a usable powered wood hauler.
Steers like a shopping cart. With only one wheel locked, it handles fine on level ground. With both wheels locked it can handle the slopes (at the expense of titanic steering on the driveway). Nice thing about it is that it can be transformed in just a few minutes back to a snowblower.
Before I got my tractor or ATV, moving the wood piles was a manual affair (i.e. wheel barrow). Not bad when the ground was dry. But in the mud season here in NH, it was a PITA. I got the idea from a picture in a magazine (can't remember which) many years ago.
The snowblower is a Toro PowerShift 1132. It has a real transmission, not a friction disc. Very stout. I simply removed the front auger housing (6 bolts and one belt...5 minute job). I fabricated a frame and bracket to bolt to the tractor unit using the same 6 bolt holes. Added a couple of 10" diameter pneumatic casters in the front and a wood box. Transformed into a usable powered wood hauler.
Steers like a shopping cart. With only one wheel locked, it handles fine on level ground. With both wheels locked it can handle the slopes (at the expense of titanic steering on the driveway). Nice thing about it is that it can be transformed in just a few minutes back to a snowblower.