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Yeah, i just came in from plowing. Totally soaked thighs. A cab would be nice. I wonder how bad they fog up. Wet boots, breathing out steam.
Anyone have input on foggy plastic windshield
Yeah, i just came in from plowing. Totally soaked thighs. A cab would be nice. I wonder how bad they fog up. Wet boots, breathing out steam.
Anyone have input on foggy plastic windshield?
Tony, I have a two-piece insulated rain suit, hood included, from LLBEAN. Cheers, Jack
 
I adapted a used Cozy Cab that I believe was once on an early John Deere, possibly a 318 to fit my 149. If you have any basic fabrication skills and the right tools, it's not all that difficult. I would highly recommend looking for a cab with a W/S wiper. Condensation on the inside of the windshield can be eliminated with a 12V. fan blowing towards the W/S. The time-consuming part is getting a good fit around the hood, engine, and frame, usually not that important except when blowing powdery snow into a 15-20 mph wind. I would not go back to blowing snow without a cab! Even with no heat it is still much warmer than being out in the open. I blew snow without a cab for years, tried everything I could think of, snowmobile suit, I still got wet sometimes and a face full of snow. Tried wearing a helmet but the snow stuck to the lens and worse yet, that caused it to fog up. I firmly believe a cab is a worthwhile investment.
 
I have a question, did they make a snow cab for the cub cadet 127? Has anyone tried adopting a modern snow cab to fit a cub cadet 127. I would like some protection from the cold and snow. So any advice would be great.
Yes, they were available
 

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Hey good people of this form, I have a question about how to get this snowblower attached to this cub cadet. I don't understand how to get the snowblower high enough for the quick attach pins to slide in. When I try to lift the snowblower high enough to get the pins to line up. The snowblower hits the side the tractor as seen in last image. Any advice on how to get the snowblower on would be great.
 
For starters, the thrower has to go toward the rear of the tractor more, lined up with/on the 2 shoulder bolts in order to clear the grill. Just takes a bit more doing is all

Have you had this thrower on this Cub before?
What model thrower is it per the tag?
 
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For starters, the thrower has to go toward the rear of the tractor more, lined up with/on the 2 shoulder bolts in order to clear the grill. Just takes a bit more doing is all

Have you had this thrower on this Cub before?
What model thrower is it per the tag?
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Here are some pictures of snowblower on the tractor before I took it off. I also included a picture of id tag.
 
removing/reinstalling is arduous enough that many folks leave the blower on and make it a dedicated snow machine . . . which of course justifies having a second (or third) Cub for warm-weather work! 😉
loader, mower, tiller, dozer, cruiser, daydreamer . . . 🚜💨💨💨
 
No reason then why it should not go back on.
No one said it would be easy.
Drive into it a bit further until the forks on the mount line up with the shoulder bolts.
I would consider storing on a roller dolly for easier storage and mounting in the future.

Now if you were trying to mount this on a wide frame Cub.....
THAT would be a whole 'nother can of worms unless it was a QA36A
 

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