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Active member
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2015
- Messages
- 40
I have a Myers 6-ft snowplow blade, complete with A-frame and angle cylinders. I fabricated it to a mounting plate for use with my 742B. On dead level, perfectly flat ground it works fine, but going over a hump, dip, or on side-sloping ground, the corners dig in or the blades rides too high over snow. I am fairly confident the source of the problem is the fact that the Bobcat has such a short wheel-base and no suspension that any change in terrain is telegraphed directly to the four wheels and thence to the bucket arms and the pivot points for the A-frame. . I believe the reason that snowplows float so well on a truck is that the wheelbase is so long and the suspension so flexible that changes in terrain have very minor influence on the plow's push plates attached to the truck. All that said, is there a method or technique for mounting a truck snowplow to a skidsteer that will allow it to float, and free the operator from adjusting the height and angle too frequently to maintain semblance of competency when plowing ?