The build is really simple. A saw and drill are the only tools needed. I do not have any plans drawn up, it was just made to fit. This is about the sixth version. Early models tended to break. There are lots of homemade plows out there. This one has some features not found on others. 1. It's cheap and easy to build with common materials and tools. 2. Attaching to the trailer hitch ball allows it to float and conform to the terrain. 3. The blade pivots and is spring loaded. It tips over when an obstacle is hit. Without this feature plows tend to break. 4. The chains keep the plow from flipping sideways. Their length can be adjusted to allow angled plowing. 5. The lifting boards are 2X4's on hinges. I copied this idea from another homemade plow.
I love this!! Makes me want to move back north. Best I could do is share the link on Facebook so my friends up north can see it. Update to add: Already got a "like" from a friend in Switzerland.
I built this without plans. It was just made to fit. Here's a still picture that shows more detail. The blade can pivot on the 5/8" bolt that attaches to the 4X4 bolted into the trailer couple. The springs allow the blade to tip when an obstruction is hit. Without this feature things tend to break. The automatic lifting boards are just 2X4's on hinges. The chains wrap around the ends of the receiver hitch.
Love it. We have to pay thousands of $$ and drive for thousands of miles just to see snow, but never enough to do that with :lol: It is around 40*C to 48*C (120*F) each day here at the moment. not much snow about at those day time temps. It is after mid night at the moment and still 36*C and I'm sweating sitting in a T shirt, shorts and bare feet outside our motorhome. We've been running the air con so hard the poor lithium house battery is crying for mercy now and it's too hot in the bed to sleep. Kinda like the look of that snow just at the moment T1 Terry
Is this a Gen 2 Prius that I see before me, its Evil Traction Control permitting controlled amounts of wheel slip, just like the book says?
Cost is very high but here is a commercially available receiver hitch plow... SnowSport 180 Utility Plow | Reversible Van, Truck & SUV Snow Plows Paul
I don't why, but I find that video to be relaxing to watch. At first, it strikes you as..."This is not a good idea" and you're actually waiting to hear a snap, and see disaster. Then you realize it's working. And not only working, but working well. I like the directing decision NOT to explain anything upfront. No close ups of the magic board. Let people simply see the end result first. Draws them in. Restores my confidence in Hardwood and Hardware store innovation. Bravo. The type of device you can imagine blue-printed in Leonardo da Vinci like pen strokes on parchment next to similar designs for flying machines and submarines or other magical devices that grasp towards the mythic. By the end, I'm almost disappointed in it's singularity of task. Like I expect a button to be pushed and suddenly it transforms into a device that creates an igloo or fashions a snowman that comes to life and takes the neighborhood kids on an adventure. But for a nearly 4 minute video of snow being manipulated by the planetary geared transmission of a Hybrid Prius, and planks of wood? I find it to be captivating and in it's specific genre, I would vote for it's Academy Award recognition. Of course it's a genre of one...so not much competition but it's definitely the best homemade Prius attached snowplow video I have ever seen.
I enjoyed the video and appreciate the ingenuity in the design of the snowplow. For me it also confirms that these gen 2 prius are one of the best snow vehicles I have driven provided they are driven sensibly and the snow is below the height of the front bumper.
I love it! I guess the only thing I'm curious about- technically that is just the backboard of a plow. Have you experimented with an actual blade of any kind attached to the bottom edge?
we can trade, it's been -35C here at night and -30 during the day for the past month. Today I ran two heaters in the garage for over 5 hours and it still wasn't above freezing inside. Then I had to move the car outside so I opened the door and within 10 seconds all that precious heat was blown outside.
Ahh.... no, I'll just sweat it out thanks all the same :lol: We do see a frost about twice a yr back in Mannum South Australia and we think that is cold. Even though it is gone by 7 am you see the locals with heavy ski jackets and gloves and acting like they are in the Antarctic or something, semms conditioning for 48*C days in summer wrecks the ability to handle any thing close to 0*C, so minus 35*C, I can't even get the deep freeze to reach those sort of numbers .... T1 Terry
I used to drive commercially so I'm used to driving large trucks backwards. All I can see while plowing are the corners of the plow. This video is this best view I've had of the plow in action. A cutting edge would certainly help. There is lots of room for improvement. That's one reason I put the video out there. I hope someone else builds on and improves it. For now my next step will be to increase the spring tension. It seems to tip too easily. Next year there might be front mounted version but that will be a bunch of work to accomplish.
Probably. But it would also bite down deeper and into firmer snow which will make the drive train work harder and maybe cause more tire slippage. Just thinking "out loud." But if the car handles it OK, it'll be a time saver.
Don't you only need to move the non packed snow away? It seemed to be doing that job very well, an edge might make the blade last longer but not sure it's really needed. T1 Terry
well, the blade doesn't need to be Excalibur or anything. Even a fat strip of hard rubber might do a bit better clearing. And with a bit more snow cleared, there's less wheel slip for the next pass.