Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

mts2snd t1_j733ot6 wrote

The cheap flat orange ones with the straight wood handle. Used them when I used to plow snow, and still have a few for home use. They wear down at the edge, but that is ok, I take small bites when I shovel so I don’t have a MI.

6

CamelHairy t1_j736cyu wrote

Look into buying a metal grain shovel. Mine is going on 30 years, and my sons on 10 years. Only repair I had to make this year was to grind the edge flat due to all the scrapping against asphalt.

https://www.harborfreight.com/aluminum-scoop-shovel-with-d-handle-69824.html

Ace 45 in. Aluminum Scoop General Purpose Shovel Wood Handle

Item #70044| Mfr #PALY-12M

Just about ,every hardware store, nursery, Walmart, and Amazon has at least one. I belive mine was an Ames.

25

Phogna_Bologna_Pogna t1_j737dge wrote

Pretty light, the scoop is made of aluminum, it’s not the most ergonomic, but is BIFL we had some of these that Great-Grandpa probably used on the farm, the edges do wear out on concrete but a good angle grinder can keep the edge clean if it does curl on you

9

TheRealThordic t1_j73az58 wrote

I uwe SunCast steelcore shovels with the bent handles. Much easier on your back than a straight handle and I've had mine for like 10 years now and they are still basically like new.

2

JoLudvS t1_j73ipge wrote

We use two broad aluminium blade dung shovels with a steel lip and ash handles for fifteen years now. Sturdy but not ightweight.

1

dizcostu t1_j73n2pg wrote

Spring steel where the shovel portion is a solid piece - not the kind that has a edge strip. Everything else will break eventually.

1

LeepOnMyDick t1_j73r28d wrote

The only problem with steel shovels is that they’re extremely loud. Several times louder than plastic. The entire neighborhood will hear you. I’ve had ok luck with plastic/replaceable steel blade, the plastic seems to deaden the metal scrape a bit.

5

celmaki t1_j73rbn4 wrote

My snow shovel is still in perfect shape second winter straight.

Thank you global warming

1

jfcmfer t1_j73rkr0 wrote

Manplow. Find the right size for you and buy it.

1

dramatix01 t1_j744f8u wrote

Don't buy the ones with the metal edge. Just buy the cheaper plastic ones. They cut though the snow better than anything and they scrape up ice really well, especially if you use it upside down. The edge wears down a little bit every season, but I've had those cheap shovels last me well over a decade.

5

Greifvogel1993 t1_j744snt wrote

Snow shovel companies can’t make exorbitant profits if they make durable snow shovels. They have to make them last for a season or two max, so they can sell you another one. Planned obsolescence is a poison to consumers. Apply this concept to most products you use.

−1

Shooting4daMoon t1_j745i7h wrote

Look for a grain shovel, if you live where you get large dumps or heavy snow. Any rancher store carry’s them. They are typically all metal unless you find an all plastic version.

1

Junior_Ad2955 t1_j7468z4 wrote

Bully Tools for sure! They are built like a tank and made in the US.

3

GeoSol t1_j747f1f wrote

Disposable = lightweight and easy to use

Buyit4life = Heavier and thus more effort to use.

Not everything needs to last forever, but i'd get an aluminum snow shovel if i had to use it regularly. Should find lots of options at farm supply stores.

5

Amyx231 t1_j74s1qn wrote

Plastic parts wear. But metal will damage the asphalt. So….

My shovel is plastic with a metal strip out front. It’s about 6-7 years old and still going strong. Costco. Yes, the plastic will eventually wear thin. But that’s years and years in the future. The plastic isn’t thin and sharp, more rounded and thicker, so it’s durable and not really damaging anything.

1

jr0127 t1_j74y6yp wrote

I’ll check my garage tomorow for you. I got this wide push shovel from Home Depot in 2017. I live in Chicago so plenty use. No issues still like new.

1

LeepOnMyDick t1_j74zfjm wrote

I get it but not everyone is in the same situation all of the time or at all. Sometimes I shovel early or late as opposed to “normal.” Maybe I just prefer as much anonymity as possible but I just don’t need that shit.

3

fallingupthehill t1_j75hdg0 wrote

I've realized I've had the same snow shovel for more than 12 years. I have no clue where I bought it, I recall it was more than I wanted to spend, but I needed one that didn't have a really long handle as I'm short. I made sure I took it with me when I got divorced. It's never cracked or chipped. Just a basic blue shovel. I'm amazed at the abuse it's taken, and still performs really well.

2

RunCyckeSki t1_j7640zt wrote

Lifelong Minnesota here. I prefer using a steel "snow pusher" for clearing the driveway and sidewalks. If you can handle the extra weight, I recommend the 30" Bully Tools snow pusher with the fiberglass handle. They also make a 24" version.

I inhereted an older steel pusher from my father and it's 35+ years old. In my experience, the plastic ones break when it's sub 0°F and you can't scrape/chisel packed ice with them. Metal can take much more abuse.

1

kelvin_bot t1_j7641gj wrote

0°F is equivalent to -17°C, which is 255K.

^(I'm a bot that converts temperature between two units humans can understand, then convert it to Kelvin for bots and physicists to understand)

2

FerengiCaptain t1_j76qddl wrote

I've never had a plastic one that lasted more than 4 winters. I've never had one that wasn't made of plastic that broke, at all.

1

PeteyMcBuds t1_j77d9sr wrote

Not the same material of blade/scoop. Just looked at doing the same, the pusher versions are way more robust than the scoops. No personal use however, but the plastic seems more brittle.

1

CamelHairy t1_j78vu72 wrote

The shovel is aluminum unless you count white rust (near ocean) it doesn't rust. Mine looks as good as the day I bought it. Sits outside next to the steps all winter, then an unheated shed the rest of the year. The only piece that is steel is the handle.

3