Folio
Bronze Member
My question is: why does my Frontier RC2060 cutter make a cleaner cut going counterclockwise vs clockwise?
The details: The brush hog is 60" wide, almost exactly covering the outside width of the rear tires on my JD 3032E. When mowing clockwise around the field the cutter leaves long intermittent streaks (two inches wide or more) of uncut grass on the right hand side just inside the rear tire. This means that on the second time around, I have to overlap the cut side of the field by at least a foot to clean up these streaks.
Mowing counterclockwise, however, I don't experience this problem and can use more of the mower to cut uncut grass. Is this because of natural blade rotation, or is something wrong with my cutter? Near as I can make out, I'm driving the same way in either direction.
The mower is level side to side on a concrete slab and the blades appear to be in good shape to my inexperienced eye. No serious dings I can see and no unusual vibrations on start up or running. It shouldn't matter, but the fields are flat to the naked eye, but very rough up close; lots of jostling about.
Any thoughts, ideas, and/or theories much appreciated.
The details: The brush hog is 60" wide, almost exactly covering the outside width of the rear tires on my JD 3032E. When mowing clockwise around the field the cutter leaves long intermittent streaks (two inches wide or more) of uncut grass on the right hand side just inside the rear tire. This means that on the second time around, I have to overlap the cut side of the field by at least a foot to clean up these streaks.
Mowing counterclockwise, however, I don't experience this problem and can use more of the mower to cut uncut grass. Is this because of natural blade rotation, or is something wrong with my cutter? Near as I can make out, I'm driving the same way in either direction.
The mower is level side to side on a concrete slab and the blades appear to be in good shape to my inexperienced eye. No serious dings I can see and no unusual vibrations on start up or running. It shouldn't matter, but the fields are flat to the naked eye, but very rough up close; lots of jostling about.
Any thoughts, ideas, and/or theories much appreciated.