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Why snow plow transmissions break! Plowing snow can be the most severe operation a transmission can
operate. Sometimes we use the phrase "pushing a ton of snow", but it can
be an understatement! We measured snow by weight and volume (varies with
temperature, e.g. light snow vs. heavy snow) and its quite common to
find 3,000 or more pounds of snow be pushed by a snow plow. That's a lot
of work! Work equates to heat, a big factor in transmissions. The harder
we work the plow truck, the more heat we generate. Even the best
transmission cooling systems can't keep up!
Next serious issues are mechanical energy (inertia) and hydraulic energy (pressure). There are a lot of heavy components in a 4 wheel drive turning and when directions are changed, these need to stop and change direction. This requires time for the "energy" (inertia) to dissipate. Think of spinning a ball on a string. When you stop spinning, the ball continues to travel until it dissipates the inertia. No different in transmissions, transfer case, drive shafts and axles. When we test transmissions on our dyno, if we change from forward to reverse abruptly, the "solid steel" drive shaft actually flexes! This "breaks" driveline parts quickly! Hydraulic energy is the other energy that causes damage to transmissions. When you change directions, the pressure in forward or reverse clutch (or band) circuits needs time to exhaust. When gear changes are too abrupt, we have hydraulic pressures in both forward and reverse circuits at the same time. Like driving your vehicle with the brakes on, it harms the transmission.
How do you prevent these forces from damaging your transmission (and
all driveline components)? You NEED to take time between direction
(gear) changes. Just like a manual transmission, the internal parts need
to come to a stop!
1- At the end of your pass (forward or backing up) 2- SHIFT TO NEUTRAL 3- RAISE OR LOWER THE BLADE (plow) 4- SHIFT INTO GEAR
These simple tips will "add years to your gears!"
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