"Ok so no go on the pads. Even on the concrete? The blade seems to like to hit the cracks.
It's a steel blade, pretty heavy and sturdy."
I assumed you had the plastic blade/wear bar. They are thicker, and will hop over most stress relievers in concrete. That would be my first modification. It's better for your machine as well. It insulates shock, and reduces vibration.
I would also try to mound everything on the windward side. It will keep most of the snow (in a squall) from even hitting your drive.
Lining both sides creates a trap, and it will hold what would have otherwise blown right over.
My BUDDY, B&L had to bust my chops... "Mr. Plow"...
I did spend 30 years plowing in N.Y.. Mainly commercial properties like shopping malls, strip malls, and schools. Many times I would work for 4-5 days straight, and catch 2-3 hours of sleep in the truck when I could. You learn how to baby your machine because no one gets paid when a plow is down. Same goes for where you put the snow. It HAS to go somewhere that will not be in the way as it accumulates, and better yet, somewhere it can actually prevent accumulation.
Try to cut your angles so the blade cant catch the cracks. Every snap of those springs is a sledge hammer to the machine.
Hey B&L... You have to be versatile brother. You never know when our beloved leaders will ban scooter sales in the US!