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Winch-Drawn Snow-Removal Tarp

Mechanical snow removal by winch pulling snow-covered tarp off driveway
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A large tarp is placed across the surface of a home driveway to catch snowfall. On one side of the driveway, an electrically-powered winch is secured to a post, with cables extending out of it and attaching to the far side of the tarp. Meanwhile the side of the tarp closest to the winch is staked into the ground to fix it in place.

After a snowfall, the winch is activated and pulls in the far side of the tarp, bringing with it all the snow that is covering it, peeling away to leave behind a clean driveway. Afterwards, the tarp can be unfurled again and re-used for the next snowfall.

This mechanical method of snow removal is intended for average-sized home driveways, and would be far less laborious than snow-shoveling, snow-blowing, etc. It would also be far cheaper and more energy-efficient than a heated driveway which melts snow.

sanman, Feb 08 2022

Cheap Winch https://www.youtube...watch?v=YFA5cX9V1vQ
review of cheap winch from Amazon [sanman, Feb 10 2022]

[link]






       [+] but this has to have been thought of no? If not bravo.   

       I'm thinking it might be easier to have the whole thing just slide, rolling into a case that pushes the snow off, basically like a window shade. The snow would still be moved off the driveway but with fewer parts maybe.
doctorremulac3, Feb 08 2022
  

       Yeah, I'd thought about that, but then there's the danger it could just slide out from under the snow, leaving the snow deposited on the driveway. I thought that the peel-away method might work better.
sanman, Feb 08 2022
  

       Flaps that lay flat, but tilt up and catch the snow when you pull it?
doctorremulac3, Feb 08 2022
  

       A crane might be a little exhorbitant for a regular home driveway.
sanman, Feb 08 2022
  

       Garden tractor perhaps?   

       Hand-crank come-along?
RayfordSteele, Feb 08 2022
  

       Either this or something else, the idea that you have to use a shovel to clear a driveway in this day and age seems barbaric.
doctorremulac3, Feb 08 2022
  

       Maybe have your winch on the SAME side the cables are attached, but up on a post. Once the tarp gets high enough, the snow will slide off.
But I do like the "roll up" style; some analysis would be required to see which is more efficient (possibly quite dependent on snow depth...).
Just had a thought: re-purpose a roll-away swimming pool cover.
neutrinos_shadow, Feb 08 2022
  

       // I think the winch might be out of my price range too, though it really is a good idea. //   

       There are cheaper winches available, which should be able to do the job. Even the cheap ones come with remotes - which would probably be important for safety.
sanman, Feb 10 2022
  

       Any significant amount of snow will keep the tarp from rolling up. You need a way and a place to dump the snow.
Voice, Feb 10 2022
  

       // Once the tarp gets high enough, the snow will slide off.//That's going to have to be a very steep angle: your posts will need to be three stories high, and quite strong.
Voice, Feb 10 2022
  

       That's why I felt the winch should pull in the far side of the tarp, in order to effectively scoop or bundle the snow off the driveway. The winch itself should not be located on the edge of the driveway, nor should the stakes which pin down the near side of the tarp be. Instead both the winch and the staked end of the tarp should be located a few meters/yards from the driveway's edge. That will give the tarp (I keep typing trap for some reason?) a place to deposit its snow that's adjacent to the driveway, and not on the driveway itself.
sanman, Feb 10 2022
  

       Okay, I get it now. A kevlar or better tarp, I guess, and you'll need to have a fairly large space to the side of the driveway. [+] And putting the tarp back down will be a chore.
Voice, Feb 10 2022
  

       For only slightly more than the cost of that winch, you could get a fairly sturdy pop-up carport structure to cover the driveway. I used a cheap $100 one from Walmart that was meant to be an event tent, with a tarp roof. Lasted me all summer, all autumn, and about 1/3 of the way through winter before the snow collapsed it. Mind you, getting it to last even that long took a fair bit of gorilla tape and ratchet straps...
21 Quest, Feb 10 2022
  

       // Garden tractor perhaps? Hand-crank come-along? //   

       Garden tractor won't have the power. Hand-crank would be too slow, and winch could be operated more safely with a remote, just in case some cable snaps free from the tarp and comes flying at you.
sanman, Feb 12 2022
  

       Re: the cheap winch.   

       1- Wow! A battery powered that thing to haul a tractor stuck in the bushes?   

       2- Both of those guys were waaaayy to close to that cable if it were to snap.
doctorremulac3, Feb 12 2022
  
      
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