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Re: (ET) Elec-trak snow thrower performance



I had an early snow blower with series windings and speed limiting shunt.  Later models may have been more efficient.  My unit pulled 40-50 amps just spinning.
 
I have a 175 foot drive.  The last 40 feet is 4 cars wide with a wall that requires most of the snow is thrown to one side only.  We average 65 inches a year or so.  The blower had its limits, but I found it to be better than the 8 hp bolens tractor snow blower that it replaced.
 
You can definitely use the whole battery pack doing the job after a big storm.  Also I keep the tractor in the garage (about 45 degrees) so the batteries are not "cold".  I coated the rusty shute with epoxy to minimize clogging.  Big problem in the wet stuff.  I have an incline at the end, but found chains alone were fine.
 
Biggest improvement for me was putting in a speed controller on the tractor.  It allowed me to match the speed to the job and back up quickly.  I later switched to a conversion of a two stage and gave the blower to a friend.
 
I think it is very effective.  I never had to fire up my gas thrower to finish the job.
 
kingLightning <MakingLightning comcast net> wrote:
I have an Elec-trak snow thrower and an E15 but have never hooked the 2 up
and used them.

I was wondering what kind of performance and experiences that any of you
have had with them. Do they get plugged at all? What happens when you really
load them down too much, a gas one just groans and will stall at worst. What
kind of snow can they handle? Do they throw it as good as a gas one?

When you have the snow thrower on an Elec-trak, do you have to have wheel
weights? I am not sure how the weight and weight distribution of an
Elec-trak compares to something like an old John Deer 110 garden tractor and
snow thrower. On that I had weights, chains, and the tires filled with
chloride, and it worked fine, but you could still tell it was front end
heavy.

I live in Michigan and have a 125ft driveway.

I understand that the E-20 motor can be run at 48v, let's say you scrap the
wiring and are using an Alltrax controller. I guess it is a matter of heat
with them and you probably are not putting the full 48v and maxed current
for very long periods of time.
Can you run the snow thrower motor at 48v too?
My electric lazyboy project is all 48v and I was considering mounting the
snow thrower on that in the winter.
Can the mower motors run on 48v? Anyone know?

Kevin




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