As a punchout user, please email ECT-punchout@RDOequipment.com for assistance.
Resource Center
{{product.shortName}}
{{product.sku}}
{{product.quantity}}
{{product.extended_sale_price | toCurrency({currencyCode : cartDetail.currency.code})}}
Remove
Cart details ({{productsTotalQuantity}})
Subtotal: {{cartDetail.cart_amount_ex_tax | toCurrency({currencyCode : cartDetail.currency.code})}}
Checkout
Your Shopping Cart is empty

How To Remove Snow 3 Different Ways

20 Nov 2020

Remove snow three different ways without a snow blower

Lots of people need to remove snow without a snow blower attachment. So in this video, we’ll show you how to remove snow three different ways using your tractor and three different implements – a front blade, a rear blade, and a materials bucket.

We’ll also show you how a broadcast spreader can be the fast answer to fighting ice around your property. 

We’ll be using a Frontier 60-inch (152.4 cm) Front Blade matched with a John Deere H120 Loader and a John Deere 1025R Compact Tractor. We’ve also added a Frontier Broadcast Spreader on the rear.

Option #1 – Remove snow with a front blade.

Attaching the front blade to the loader to remove snow is about as easy a hook-up as you’ll ever do. Just insert the loader carrier into the top hangers on the front blade, then lift and roll back the carrier and the front blade will fall into place. Then insert the locking pins and you’re ready to go.

This front blade offers five angled positions and is adjusted using a simple pin and clip system. So, when removing snow with a front blade, you can push snow in any direction. It also has a trip edge feature that protects the blade, the loader, and the tractor if the blade edge contacts an obstacle by allowing the blade to rotate forward and glide over the obstacle. The blade can also be locked into place using two simple lock pins.

We’ve also added plow guides so the operator always has a view of where the outside blade edges are, no matter how deep the snow.

Since we’re working on a gravel surface, we added skid shoes to protect the reversible cutting edge on the bottom of the blade, and to keep from pushing gravel off the road.

You change the skid shoe height by removing the lock pin from the skid shoe, then adjust the number of spacers to the desired height, and put any removed spacers under the lock pin for storage. Then reinstall the lock pin, and you’re ready to go.

As you can see, using a front blade to remove snow is a pretty simple task. But like any other project with your tractor, it’s important to stay focused and pay attention to what you’re doing.

Option #2 – Don’t have a front blade? How about a rear blade?

Here, we’ve matched a Frontier 72-inch (183 cm) Rear Blade with another small tractor – a John Deere 3032E Compact Tractor. We’ve also added a 300E loader and a 61-inch (155 cm) bucket. And to top it off, we added an iMatchTM Quick Hitch that makes hooking and unhooking 3-point implements easy.

With the iMatch quick hitch, all you have to do is focus on the top hook, and everything else falls into place. Then you close the locking levers to secure the implement, raise the parking stand, and once again, you’re ready to go.

The angle of this Frontier rear blade can be adjusted in two directions with another simple pin and clip system: tilted up and down from one end to the other – or angled, with the left or right end in a more forward position than the other. In fact, you can pivot this rear blade 360-degrees if you need to.

You can also offset the blade up to 12-inches (30.5 cm) to the left or right so it sits slightly outside the tractor’s path. That’s a handy feature if you want to remove snow from a soft shoulder, for example, while keeping the tractor on a firm road surface.

Option #3 – Remove snow with a loader bucket.

Here’s another way to remove snow without a snow blower attachment. The loader and bucket we’ve added to this tractor are the tools she’ll use to widen the area she’s cleared by using the bucket to scoop up snow and pile it out of the way.

Add these three Top 10 implements to your machine shed and you’ve got a snow pushing, pulling and piling package that just won’t quit.

Fighting ice the easy way.

Now, if ice is your issue, the Frontier Broadcast Spreader attached to the 3-point hitch on your tractor is the perfect tool for spreading sand, salt or other chemical ice-melt product. The polyethylene hopper and stainless steel spreading components are resistant to sand, salt, and chemical corrosion. An internal agitator keeps material inside the hopper from clumping. An optional PVC cover keeps moisture out and your ice-melt in while in operation or transport. And, the feed rate lever is conveniently operated from inside the cab. Pretty handy on a long, cold workday.

A broadcast spreader like this is a real 3-season tool. Fighting ice in the winter. Spreading fertilizer in the spring and spreading seed in the fall.

And remember, always read the Operator’s Manual before operating any piece of equipment and follow all operating and safety instructions.

Frontier’s nearly 400 implements and attachments are designed, engineered, tested, and manufactured to fit and work with John Deere tractors. That’s a breadth and depth of John Deere and Frontier equipment compatibility you won’t find anywhere else in the world.

Related Links:
John Deere 4R Snow Tractors
Commercial Specialty Snow Tractors
Buy These Five Compact Tractor Attachments and Accessories First
John Deere Mower Maintenance 101

Staying Connected
Join our email list to receive information on featured equipment, store promotions and sales, special announcements, and more.