The local JD dealer had a top of the line ZTR with those on. Unusual looking. VERY expensive - around $650 for a pair, as I remember.
And if you are running a lawn care business, losing $15-20/hour per person for 2 guys to be at the dealer (or going back to your shop) getting tires fixed instead of you getting paid for the lawns that they should be mowing will pay back that $650 in a hurry (as will not getting calls for your mower cutting unevenly because one tire is lower than the other).When you have a bad back, a smoother ride can be priceless.
And if you are running a lawn care business, losing $15-20/hour per person for 2 guys to be at the dealer (or going back to your shop) getting tires fixed instead of you getting paid for the lawns that they should be mowing will pay back that $650 in a hurry (as will not getting calls for your mower cutting unevenly because one tire is lower than the other).
I suspect that it would depend on the congregation and how strict they are.I saw these the other day on a large tractor pulling into a gas station. The guy in the cab looked Old Order Pennsylvania Dutch to me (a fair number of local folks are Pennsylvania Dutch here). Do these wheels pass the religious rules for letting people own or operate on the road? Last summer I hired a crew that I took to be Old Order to install fence, and they were happy to drive my tractor, which had ordinary ag tires. But owning it, or driving it on the road, didn't come up. Just wondering.
I suspect that it was a hard rubber tire as it appears that tweels are not available in anything bigger than a skid steer size tires.Aaron Z