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And who would have thunked these caveman types needed heat ? |
^^^
Right! I figured that Tobs's head to toe body rug would be more than enough to keep the bisch warm! |
I have multiple rooms in my shop.... My main workshop room is where I spend a couple hours every day. It has a propane wall mount heater and I leave it on all winter long to keep the room 65-70. Don't care what it costs as it is my happy place. The larger "storage" portion of my shop has propane ceiling tube heaters. I leave them set at about 45 to keep the pipes from freezing and when I need to work out there, I simply turn the thermostat up and wear coveralls to work in. It takes an hour or two to heat up to maybe 60. All my seasonal cars, motorcycles, airplanes etc are in this big room and none have had any issues that I am aware of from the 45-60 random temp swings during the nearly 20 years I have been doing this.
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if it gets too bad i may at some point look into a unit for the jeep, but again that would be less maneuverable in my estimation. if i do ultimately outfit the jeep with one i will likely do some removal work on the side to have it pay for itself over time. im retired so ive got more time than money and expect there to be a learning curve i will have to overcome before i get efficient at it. |
I have a blade for my Polaris 300 4x4 quad.... It works great until the snow banks are high on each side of the drive and then it drifts across completely filling the trough. With the blade angled one can throw snow like the big county trucks provided you have room to push it to the side. It works way better than my old garden tractor with chains or my old ford 9N with back blade.
With that said, we get a lot of drifting where I live and now I typically just use my newer JD compact 4wd tractor with a front end loader bucket up front and a blade on the back. It is not as fast as the quad after a fresh snowfall, but once the big drifts start happening the bucket is king. |
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im at 4000 feet and got two feet over the holiday, but a southern storm dumped like 6" of rain over the last couple days with temps in the high 40's all of it has melted so ill get a fresh slate next snow. it arrives this thursdee so I will take a couple photos of it being, and installed here this weekend. with the woodstove in the background all lit up of course..:D Quote:
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Tobie do I need to teach you the ways of mountain living? Hey will we see you at the 25 hours of TG this weekend?
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I stayed home and ran the generator every 3 hours or so to keep the fridge contents cold.... im getting equipped for the mountain life, but any hints do tell my brother.... t |
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https://i.pinimg.com/originals/ae/0e...ea6c152f9b.jpg |
^^^^I always preferred the "Chest Thread" myself, but this picture hits all the bases !
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A couple bags of sand on the front and rear of the quad will be your friend. I used to put two bags of softener salt on the front and rear racks of my 450 and it helped a lot with traction. Tractors are nice but not really all that maneuverable. Everyone (well you might not) knows where i'm going here... There's one tool that will run circles around anything mentioned so far for snow removal. But it's "spendy" |
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https://www.health.com/mind-body/josh-brolin-sunburn-butt-sunning |
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I appreciate the faith you have in my game raw.... last snow event http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1576371228.jpg got the blade after a ton of fed ex ground drama and have installed it. wish id gone with the 60" blade now that I have mounted it. got a 54" and it seems slim.... just need some snow now. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1576371326.jpg note the fighting cocks my great aunt left me when she passed in the window sill... |
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