LD1
Epic Contributor
Based on my experience I don't think ztr's are as bad as everyone is making them out to be. I have 3 years experience on a Bobcat commercial ZTR with a 61" deck mowing about 7 acres a week before I move out of my parents house and got a place of my own. The 7 acres has two ditches that like to always be wet, and a pond with a very steep hillside to mow.
The previous mower for the hillside was a 8n ford with a 60" 3ph mower. We had the tires set as wide as possible and when mowing, we were always off the seat, on the uphill side, with a foot on the downhill side break, just in case of a roll over. Fortunatally it never happened. The ZTR mows this slope with no problems at all. I felt way more comfortable on that machine, even with no rops. If it was a little wet, it would want to slide, as the tires arent very agressive, but I never had the feeling that it wanted to follover. The center of gravity is very low on them machines.
And they do get stuck if you try to mow ditches when it is very mucky, but you get to know what the machine can and cant do. I have been mowing my place fot the last 3-years with my parents old JD 240 garden tractor and it has bar tread tires. In my opinion, it will not go places a ZTR will in terms of slopes and mud. It doesn't take much slope to take enough weight off the uphill rear tire and make it spin, whereas a ZTR wouldn't be a problem. The pond slope mentioned earlier, I wouldn't even think of using a garden tractor on. And it doesn't take much mud to get a garden tractor stuck either.
To sum it all up, if you need a actual tractor with 4wd and a loader etc, then look at the BX or equivellent. But when it comes to mowing, I'd take a ZTR over a Garden tractor any day, regardless of condition. You may get stuck a few times learning it's limitations, but on slopes, I'd take a ZTR any day over a garden tractor.
The previous mower for the hillside was a 8n ford with a 60" 3ph mower. We had the tires set as wide as possible and when mowing, we were always off the seat, on the uphill side, with a foot on the downhill side break, just in case of a roll over. Fortunatally it never happened. The ZTR mows this slope with no problems at all. I felt way more comfortable on that machine, even with no rops. If it was a little wet, it would want to slide, as the tires arent very agressive, but I never had the feeling that it wanted to follover. The center of gravity is very low on them machines.
And they do get stuck if you try to mow ditches when it is very mucky, but you get to know what the machine can and cant do. I have been mowing my place fot the last 3-years with my parents old JD 240 garden tractor and it has bar tread tires. In my opinion, it will not go places a ZTR will in terms of slopes and mud. It doesn't take much slope to take enough weight off the uphill rear tire and make it spin, whereas a ZTR wouldn't be a problem. The pond slope mentioned earlier, I wouldn't even think of using a garden tractor on. And it doesn't take much mud to get a garden tractor stuck either.
To sum it all up, if you need a actual tractor with 4wd and a loader etc, then look at the BX or equivellent. But when it comes to mowing, I'd take a ZTR over a Garden tractor any day, regardless of condition. You may get stuck a few times learning it's limitations, but on slopes, I'd take a ZTR any day over a garden tractor.