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“On The Cheap” Snowplow Tractor
“It isn’t fancy, but it takes care of the snow and I can work in comfort,” says Doug Kalnbach, Nashville, Mich., about his Kubota B 6100 14 hp., 4-WD tractor fitted with a 10-ft. wood snow blade and a “shower curtain” cab.
    “I don’t have much money tied up and they work great,” says Kalnbach.
    He clamped a 2-in. dia. heavy steel pipe vertically onto each side of the tractor’s loader support frame, then screwed a 4-ft. sq., 1/2-in. thick plastic board on top for the roof. The shower curtains are attached to the roof’s edges with 1/2-in. binder clamps, and are attached to the pipes on front with big plastic clamps that serve as door latches. On front of the cab, he attached wooden strips to the pipes to form a rectangular windshield.
    To make a canvas heat houser around the engine he bought new canvas and wrapped it around the hood, making sure to cover the tractor’s hydraulic pump. After cutting holes for the headlights he tied the canvas underneath the tractor.
    “The heat from the engine comes directly back into the cab. Even during winter, it can get so hot that I often have to open the side curtains,” says Kalnbach. “The shower curtain can be easily punctured while driving through brush, so usually I have to buy a new curtain about every other year. However, that’s a small price to pay.”
    He built the wooden snow blade by bolting an 8-ft. 2 by 8 on top of a 10-ft. 2 by 12. The blade C-clamps onto the frame of a home-built, 3-pt. log skidder. “A turnbuckle on the log skidder’s frame is used to adjust the blade’s angle,” notes Kalnbach.
    Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Doug Kalnbach, 8270 Thornapple Lake Rd., Nashville, Mich. 49073 (517 204-2871; dougkal1056@gmail.com).


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2021 - Volume #45, Issue #2