Snowblower and Rust-Oleum hydrophobic spray

jabloomf1230

Active member

Equipment
B 3200
Sep 28, 2014
125
34
28
Voorheesville, NY
With every snow season I seem to be getting more "icy mix" storms which make snowblowing a chore. My B3200's chute will eventually clog up with a concrete-like mush of water and snow. My question is about Rust-Oleum NeverWet, which I have used to seal my work boots. It supposedly works on metal, so I was wondering if anyone had tried using it on a snowblower?
 

SidecarFlip

Banned

Equipment
M9000HDCC3, M9000HD, Kubota GS850 Sidekick
Oct 28, 2018
7,197
546
83
USA
Pam cooking spray works well as well. What I used before I sold my blower and hired the guy down the road to plow out the drives for 10 bucks a time. Don't even need to go outside.

FYI, Rustoleum now has a Kubota Orange 2 spray paint (and in quarts too) that is a dead match for a Kubota with Orange 2 (late model color). Just did my cast weights on my M's.
 

BAP

Well-known member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
2012 Kubota 2920, 60MMM, FEL, BH65 48" Bush Hog, 60"Backblade, B2782B Snowblower
Dec 31, 2012
2,525
664
113
New Hampshire
Spray Fluid Film or Cooking Spray on your snowblower and it will help prevent the snow from sticking.
 

Cfrazer

Member
Lifetime Member

Equipment
BX2670-1,FEL, BX5450, BBox, GS1548, RB1560, QH05, AI2 Forks, SS Curtis Cab
Jan 22, 2018
86
2
8
North Rose, NY, USA
I second the fluid film it’s the best solution I’ve tried so far.


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Tughill Tom

Well-known member

Equipment
B3200
Dec 23, 2013
1,105
1,121
113
Turin, NY
I've been using Snow-Jet, works well no clogging and can sweep off the housing before it goes back into the garage. The more you use it the slicker it gets, going on 3 seasons using it. I think I bought it at TSC.
 

gmfishe

New member

Equipment
L4701
Jan 16, 2018
1
0
1
NC
I think Black Magic Tire Wet will work....I have used it in similar situations with good results and it is cheap!!!
 

tiktock

New member
Jun 27, 2018
225
3
0
Plaistow
First year with the blower on a tractor. Both storms so far have been the worst possible for a larger format snowblower....4-6" of slushy mush.

First thing I did was remove that stupid safety grate.

Second thing I did was run it at a much higher RPM which seemed to help clogging a ton and the manual confirmed max RPM for wetter snow.

I'm going to try a few of the sprays listed here. I've been using my wife's cooking spray for years. The local TSC has some kind of pretty heavy duty looking spray-on graphite that I may try.
 

ipz2222

Active member

Equipment
L235, bx2670
May 30, 2009
1,927
31
38
chickamauga ga usa
Fluid Film is great stuff. A friend first told me about it years ago but it was only available at John deere dealers and $12 a can!!!!! Was at Lowes yesterday and saw a display for $4.24. Actually one can had the sticker on it for that price. I quickly scooped up all I could carry. When the lady rang it up, it showed, $8.99. I showed her the can with the sticker and her response was, " It must be on sale", I agreed. I should have gotten more.
 

John T

Active member

Equipment
2017 BX23S
May 5, 2017
741
196
43
under a rock
What D2 said.
Fluid film is great.

This Dupont works Great for all kinds of things also.

.



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WFM

Well-known member

Equipment
L3800
Apr 5, 2013
1,187
493
83
Porter Maine
My new WoodMaxx snowblower has a white plastic liner in the chute. I've used it 5-6 times now and it really shoots the snow.
Maybe the plastic liner is an option for your snowblower too.
 

skeets

Well-known member

Equipment
BX 2360 /B2601
Oct 2, 2009
14,141
2,790
113
SW Pa
spray pam cooking spray cheap easy to find and smells good too ,esp if you get the butter spray :D
 

jabloomf1230

Active member

Equipment
B 3200
Sep 28, 2014
125
34
28
Voorheesville, NY
We haven't had a whole lot of snow, but I did test DuPont Snow and Ice Repellent and Snojet. Both products worked wonders on the tractor snowblower and my Ariens snowblower. Pam spray also seemed to work just as well but then a few days later my wife was wondering why the can was empty for cooking. It reminded me of time I used cheap vodka in an emergency to thaw out my car's windshield during a nasty ice storm. It didn't work because the bottle had been refilled with water. At least I found out which of my teenage kids were drinking the vodka.