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Zero Turn Mower Reccomendations
Ran a ZTR mower around the place for the first time and am pretty impressed. Have been mowing ROW in front and other small places on the farm with my Kubota BX1800 & mid mount 54" mowing deck. A small tractor with a loader, while useful out here, is redundant to some degree since we also have a 50hp tractor w/loader.
The ZTR I used was a Hustler w/54" deck and a 20something HP aircooled Kawasaki engine. Seemed pretty well built too (I was under it changing out the blades). I'd probably trade the BX and it's attachments for a new ZTR. Anyone out there have any preferences? Experiences? |
Stay away from anything built by MG. They make Troy Built, MG, Briggs and Stratton, Stiel chain saws, and much more. Many of the names used to signify quality, but now much of what they make is crap. Spared are very slow in coming and the quality is way down. They used to make Cub Cadet but I think the employees bought the name and the quality has come back.
My brother mows commercially and uses a Scag; very expensive but good. I just bought a $2,500 John Deere for the church and although it only has 20 hrs. on it it seems like a pretty good mower. My neighbor tried out a zero turn Gravely but found it very rough ridding. He went back to a Grasshopper. Sears make a good ZT machine and has a good warranty. All the zero turn movers are basically the same mechanically. They mostly use the same kind of hydraulic motors and valving. It mostly boils down to what kind of warranty you can get and how close the nearest service is. If you go into Austin of some other reasonably big town go to the better sections and see what kind of mowers the landscape companies use. Remember that you are not going to make your living off this machine so there is not need to spend $8k when $2,500 might do as well. |
I have a Dixon with triple bags & assist blower.
I like it, mow 2.5 acres of grass more or less. |
Ariens had a good Zero turn. Pretty sturdy when I tested one out.
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I've been very happy with my John Deere (X300). They make some zero turn models, link here:
http://www.deere.com/en_US/ProductCatalog/HO/series/ho_eztrak_series.html They also make a 4-wheel steering version of my tractor which will more or less turn on a dime as well. It's the X304 - http://www.deere.com/en_US/ProductCatalog/HO/servlet/com.deere.u90785.cce.productcatalog.view.servlets.ProdCatProduct?pNbr=SKU21847&tM=HO&link=enav Good luck! Just serviced my JD this afternoon, getting it ready for the summer. Just curious - what do those of you who have JD's/lawn tractors use for oil? Synthetic? |
If you don't need the zero turn ability and have a lot of relatively even ground to mow think about either a flail mower or a finish mower to fit your tractor. I used a flail when I mowed the local soccer fields.
The flail will handle slightly deeper grass but the finish mower makes a better cut. The flail cuts to 6'+ while the finish mower usually only goes to 5' wide. |
Pretty happy with my Husqvarna Rider 155. It's not ztr, but about a 3" turn radius and very strong frame. Only 42" cut though. Fun to drive, I look forward to mowing now!
My opinion is most every manufacturer has a good product line and an entry-level product line, which are cheap junk. If you see the same cut machine with similar features but one costs an extra grand or so, spend the grand and get something of value. Gilly |
John Deere 455
Quite possibly the best mowing machine made. http://www.machinefinder.com/images/...73240_huge.jpg |
Gilly, If you think that every manufacturer has a good product line you have never owned a mower made by MG.
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My dad has had his kubota zero turn mower for more than 5 years(it has the 2 arms for steering) and it runs like new. They are good mowers. Stay away from cub cadet.
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They're probably made by MTD.
Most lawn tractors you find at a box store are MTD or AYP built, with different graphics and paint. Sometimes they have different features, like store A will only have manuals, while store B has only hydros. I had a Ranch King tractor that was a hydro, and a K-Gro tractor that was a manual, both were 100% identical past the names and transmission. |
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Info here - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTD_Products I don't believe they own Stihl, however. Stihl is still an independent family-owned company based out of Germany. Which is, of course, why their chainsaws kick some serious sawdust (I've got an 036 Pro). :D |
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As regards to Cub Cadet? My 1973 Cub Cadet 73 (bought new) is running just fine & never let us down. Your comment on Cub Cadet, without context is meaningless. |
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I bought a Gravely Z152 last year on repo. Was $7,000 something new, I bought it with 100 Hrs. and it cost me $3,000. I love that machine, and I've used them all (Scag, Honda commercial, Bunton, Exmark etc). This mower is the bomb, and built like a tank. Look on Flea-bay for low hour repossession units, they are out there.
Here is a link to my mower: http://www.gravely.com/Commercial/Zeroturn/100i/152imxdz/Pages/features.aspx Good luck in your search. |
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