I have a '83 Toro 826 snowthrower, which was bought new. My father and I split the price, and since we lived next door to each other it got double use every winter until 2004. Actually got triple use the last seven years; my aunt and uncle lived next to my parents and my uncle plowed his driveway up to '97.
In '04 the machine wouldn't move when put into forward or reverse. My father having been an auto mechanic before he retired, took it apart figuring it was a belt. He said it was more than that and the part would cost more than the Toro was worth. Long story short, bought different machine, sorry I did. Just not as good. Same price, but 21 years later I should have realized that shouldn't be. Bought it in a hurry and figured more hp and wider cut, its got to be better. Wrong. So, I have the Toro sitting in the garage, does it make sense to get it repaired? Still has little rust, the body is real metal not tin and its heavy as hell. Also the chute is much bigger than the newer one which is something I miss. Think the 21 years of wear is too much (even though it still was going strong when it stopped moving)?
In '04 the machine wouldn't move when put into forward or reverse. My father having been an auto mechanic before he retired, took it apart figuring it was a belt. He said it was more than that and the part would cost more than the Toro was worth. Long story short, bought different machine, sorry I did. Just not as good. Same price, but 21 years later I should have realized that shouldn't be. Bought it in a hurry and figured more hp and wider cut, its got to be better. Wrong. So, I have the Toro sitting in the garage, does it make sense to get it repaired? Still has little rust, the body is real metal not tin and its heavy as hell. Also the chute is much bigger than the newer one which is something I miss. Think the 21 years of wear is too much (even though it still was going strong when it stopped moving)?
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