Thanks Rhinochugger. I am not familiar with Jerry Barnes' blower. I'll see what I can find. I did find an interesting blower made from 3D printed parts and sold by Spykerworkshops.com. It was originally designed for a Kyosho Blizzard snowcat, but I believe could be adapted to a railcar. Unfortunately it is a bit pricey even the kits. But it does a terrific job in even deep snow. Here are a couple videos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WCegg23qY0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPEa_3Q_8pQ
The blower has a metal plate across the bottom that might be an issue if it contacted both tracks. That no doubt could be replaced by a plastic one.
Thank you Mike for the info and suggestions. It looks like your USA train mod works well. I have read that the stock power is not up to the task so a beefy pittman is a good choice. I have yet to decide on a motor (540, 380, or a geared motor I have ordered). I have also not decided about a cowl. Would a cowl make it more or less likely to clog. How does your USA trains rotary do with clogging? Right now I expect the snow will just fly out in all directions (powder as you say not wet snow). I built an earlier rotary with a cowl and heavy rotor (unfinished - I'll put a photo below if I can find one). I wanted to go simpler this time. But it is an experiment that can be changed.
I also see you ran a flanger between the rotary and the locos. I assume that it to clear off the rails of what the rotary missed. I like that idea. I had originally thought to attach a small plow to the front of the rotary, but it interfered with the fan housing.
Thanks for the link to the Rio Grande rotary thread. Wow! That person has 1000 times the talent I have. What a great job. I could never do such a terrific job in creating a model of an actual rotary. I need to read over that thread thoroughly. I did buy a couple computer box fans like he used, but I wasn't sure how effective the blades would be or how to drive the blades externally. I need to read further in his thread to find out. The fan I am using is lightweight aluminum with prominent blades.
Here are some photos of my earlier effort. I haven't tried it in snow but just looking at it I thought that the fan contact area was too small and I overdid the cowl. With my newer effort I'm thinking the fan will blow the snow as much as scoop it but still look a little like a rotary.
Craig