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Troy Bilt 2420 - Skid Shoe Issue

2.1K views 14 replies 6 participants last post by  Toro-8-2-4  
#1 ·
Hi Folks: I have a Troy-Bilt 2420 that has served me well as I am in my third snow season here in the mountains of Arizona (we don’t get many annual snow events, but when we do they can be significant and a portion of my long driveway goes uphill to the street which is an issue.)

While very pleased with the snowblower’s performance, what’s driving me a bit crazy is that I cannot keep the stock skids that came with the snowblower from gradually slipping position that results in the front blade getting to low to the pavement. I’ve tightened the skid bolts as much as I can and re-tighten them often. But I assume vibration and the weight of the machine causes them to slip a bit from use. While a portion of my driveway is smooth concrete, a lengthy portion is asphalt that is a bit bumpy (from a lousy chip-seal job) and uneven in places which necessitates have the front blade clearance to be stay about 3/8” off the the pavement to prevent front blade damage.

Any suggestions on how to solve this issue? Any better or bigger skid shoes available that may give me better results. Thanks. >> Jim
 
#6 ·
I have the same snow blower and have never had the skids slip. However, after the first couple of uses, I switched from 4-1/2" skids to longer (7-1/2"?) skids. Perhaps my longer skids have better bolt placement so that there's less rotational force against the skid when I hit bumps. I felt that the 4-1/2" skids were too prone to nose-diving, which is why I switched to longer skids.
 
#15 ·
Extending a little bit as you said is a plus. I like longer skid shoes on MTD's becasue it add some extra stiffness to the thin wall bucket sides. I have seen them bend to the point they hit the rotating auger. They are easy to bend back but some won't for a while and put up with the scrapping.