snow plow picture

Sno Brum

Snow Plows


Sno Brum Original Snow Removal Tool with Telescoping Handle
(Lawn & Patio) Sno Brum

Will not scratch your car's paint or leave scuff marks
Foam head measures 17-inches x 6-Inches
Telescoping handle extends from 27-inches to 46-inches for plenty of reach


Price: $29.95 $15.79


Customer Reviews:
  1. Must have for snow!
    I finally got a Snow Brum after living in the northeast my whole life. I can't believe I've wasted so much time with a regualr snow brush. And this is a required tool if you have an SUV and hate having 50 pounds of snow slide down your wind shield when ever you hit the brakes. You can clean...
  2. Great Product
    I bought my first one a number of years ago at a chain store and was skeptical but then after using it to push off huge amounts of snow with one sweep I was hooked. The telescoping handle is nice and reaches high over the car. Lots of heavy snow can be removed in a few minutes unlike a snow...
Lego Snow Plow (Pictures)


I did build this plow and there is a video on it. It took me 3 weeks to build it. The plow goes up and down with a Lego Pnuematic Cylinder, the ...

The Northwestern miller
The Northwestern miller To one who does not know of rotary snow- plows, this picture might not unnaturally suggest that the engine's boiler has exploded and that the steam is ...

An aerodynamic approach to improve visibility during high speed snow plowing
An aerodynamic approach to improve visibility during high speed snow plowing ... a major visibility and safety concerns for the snow plow driver. A picture during the ride taken from the passenger side seat is shown in Figure 4.17. ...

The snow particles entrained in the wake of the snowplow (i.e. snow cloud) and the subsequent snow accumulation on the warning lights appear as the most pronounced visibility problems behind the snowplow truck. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) methods are employed with detailed 2D and 3D models of the snowplow trucks (1) to evaluate the performance of the add-on devices (airfoils) available in the market which improve the rear visibility of truck by the public; (2) to gain more insight over the snow cloud pattern. Considering the low density of snow particles and high drag coefficient, they are assumed to follow air flow and their effect on the flow pattern is neglected. The effect of airfoil on the snow accumulation behind the truck is quantified by pressure and shear stress distribution. The airfoil selected based on the numerical studies is implemented on the back of the truck and tested in the field. The results confirmed the rear visibility performance increase by the airfoil over...


Official gazette of the United States Patent Office
Official gazette of the United States Patent Office On a snow-plow a surface rising at an incline, knife- blade-like side rims on the ... A moving-picture apparatus or the like, provided with a flame-shield ...

The new guide to skiing
The new guide to skiing 14) The wedge (snowplow) PHOTO 14A-C The wedge (or snowplow) is a means of slowing down or stopping on a gentle gradient at slow speeds. ...

Fat boys, carving skis, cross skis, extreme shaped skis: that is the new language of alpine skiing. This best-selling classic has been completely rewritten to explain what makes the shaped skis so revolutionary ”and so exciting, especially for beginners. With over 300 specially commissioned color photographs showing step by step how to turn and how to maintain control easily under all conditions, and with its clear text, this is the book for a new generation of alpine skiers. Featuring more than eighty unique stop-action photographic sequences, The New Guide to Skiing shows how to ski with greater ease, precision, and control while obtaining optimum performance from shaped skis. Based on the newest and least stressful methods, it demonstrates how to deal with skiing off trail or in deep powder and illustrates the eleven specific turns needed to master difficult conditions, including ice and moguls.


Michigan roads and pavements
Michigan roads and pavements You will note that, there is not more than 9 to 10 inches of snow. Picture No. 3 consists of a 10 Ton Holt tract or equipped with a plow somewhat similar to ...





snow plow picture with discount

  • What a difference a year makes: Historic snow of 2011 now just a year-old memory

    Herald-Whig Staff Writer

    With temperatures this week nudging into the 50s and 60s, the region's pleasant conditions to date this winter generate hope that Punxsutawney Phil will forecast an early end to winter when he emerges from his lair on Groundhog Day tomorrow.

    A year ago, it was a far different picture.

    The Quincy area was smothered in a record-setting 22 inches of snow last Feb. 1, and any local groundhog would have needed a stepladder to climb high enough above the drifts to see his shadow.

    It was a momentous time in local history. A freak winter storm descended suddenly on the Midwest, producing what many local residents will come to regard as the biggest snowstorm of their lives.

    It all started Sunday, Jan. 30, 2011, when the National Weather Service began issuing reports that a massive winter storm was heading this way. By Monday, Jan. 31, the weather service was warning blizzard conditions would likely be in the offing, with more than a foot of snow expected in parts of the region.

    I'm Not A Snowplow Virgin Anymore

    It's Black Friday.  I am NOT shopping.  I am sitting at home, in front of the fireplace, with a dog in her bed on what I call a hassock, what my daughter calls an ottoman, and what my mother would have called a foot stool.  Whatever.  You know what I mean.  We're happy.  We're warm.  It's raining outside.  I should have said, IT'S RAINING OUTSIDE!!!  This is very good news.  The snow has melted.  All of it.

    And speaking of snow, we are no longer snowplow virgins.  The snowplow that came as a birthday present over a year ago and then proved to be unnecessary LAST winter, has already proved its worth THIS winter.  The snowplow worked.  We plowed and sanded the driveway last Tuesday and we plowed and re-sanded it again yesterday so everyone could make it up the hill for Thanksgiving dinner.

    About that sand.  We happen to have a large stack of sandbags sitting in a garage.  They contain sand that was purchased for part of the remodel we did a year ago, and the bags in the stack turned out to be EXTRA sand.  So the sand was already bought and paid for and, better still, already here.  It was just a matter of spreading same.

    So picture this.  Our little Kubota has a snow plow on the front and a minimal truck bed in the back.  So we loaded the bags of sand into the back.  By the way the bags are 100 pounds apiece.  Bill is 70+.   I am 66+.  The bags were heavy, but we managed.  We made it work.  Then, we took a box knife.  Bill drove the Kubota up the driveway.  I walked behind.  (No he does not think he's a king.  He's just a much better four-wheel drive driver.)  I would cut the paper sand bags with the box knife and then sweep the sand out the crack between the floor of the truck bed and the tail gate.  It worked.  Worked like a charm.

    We did it on Tuesday so we could go shopping.  We went to our daughter's neighborhood supermarket where my grandson is a noted personage.  We call it Colty's Red Apple as opposed to anybody else's Red Apple.  This is a small grocery store.  It was Tuesday before Thanksgiving and the day AFTER a serious weather event in the Seattle area.  But capitalism works.  In the meat department, I was able to choose among five twenty pound turkeys.  (The one I chose was delicious, by the way.)  But we were able to buy everything we needed with the exception of one thing--a can of peach pie filling needed for our traditional holiday fruit salad.  For some reason, they had plenty of pumpkin pie filling but no peach.  (By the way, I'm philosophically opposed to canned pumpkin pie filling.  Pumpkin pie in this house is only made from REAL pumpkins, and on Wednesday we made three of them!)  So let's hear it for the grocery store that made the feast possible.

    ...

    Read more...

    Happy Thanksgiving in Missoula! « Missoula Red Tape

    The sparkly trees are going up in the newsroom and the little lights are shining. I’m still coming down from Thanksgiving, though.

    I made my first turkey roulade, and I didn’t screw it up. In fact, it tasted wonderful and looked beautiful. My sweetie’s uncle taught me how to do a butcher’s wrap to tie it, and I wouldn’t have been embarrassed if Martha Stewart had dropped in for a slice.

    I saw how busy folks were with comments about the parking garage when I came back. I’m going to follow up maybe next week on the costs of the garage, and if there’s information that should see the light of day, please holler here or shoot me at note at keila.szpaller@missoulian.com.

    I know this post is late. I was so on time for Veterans Day, but Hanukkah is in full swing and here I am posting about Thanksgiving. It’s such a great holiday, though. Friends and cheesy puffs.

    I was thinking of the people I’m thankful for on my beat. The neat thing about stories is they can change the way you see things.

    News

    $98000 snowplow simulators let drivers practice: Watch out for that deer!

    Pioneer Press - Dec 03, 2010

    That's the experience snowplow drivers and would-be snowplow drivers are getting on the Minnesota Department of Transportation's new
    I'm Not A Snowplow Virgin Anymore

    Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog) - Nov 27, 2010

    So picture this. Our little Kubota has a snow plow on the front and a minimal truck bed in the back. So we loaded the bags of sand into the back.
    Show Low ponders snow plan

    White Mountain Independent - Nov 24, 2010

    This picture was taken looking East on the Deuce of Clubs where dirty snow covers the sidewalks after one of last year's storms and snow plow cleanup.
    Winter snow hits the Northland

    Pine Journal - Nov 18, 2010

    Snow plow drivers did encounter a number of cars parked on the streets, despite the city's snow ordinance (number 270) which states that there is no parking
    Transportation crews, drivers prepare for slick morning commute

    KTVB - Nov 22, 2010

    It is why state crews didn't really have to clear anything Sunday, although more than 80 pieces of snowplow equipment were on standby if that was to change.