I can see the stuff falling before I even get through typing this post...
I just don't understand the big deal about ZERO TURN MOWERS. Yeah, they are great for running around a bunch of trees, but when you have a lot of open space, what is the deal? The guy that does the church property up the street has a fleet of zero turns, and occasionally I will jump on my tractor and run up there and do the "church yard" for him. I can do it in about half the time he can with his 54" mowers. Course, depending on which tractor I jump on, I might have him beat by shear horsepower alone, but not really.
The JD2555 with a 6'6" cut does a pretty good job in seventh gear, if you can hang on. Travel speeds exceed whatever they can hang onto that zero turn at and with that much horsepower, cut doesn't suffer. If I jump on the Ole Allis, a 50 year old tractor rated somewhere around 20 hp with it's six foot (72") cut belly mower, I might have to slow down just a little when I get into the thicker grass, but still "get 'er dun" in short time. Whenever I am out back playing around and my neighbor behind me needs some help with his 7.5 acre yard, I jump on the Allis and go mow an acre or two to make his riding mower days (yes DAYS) go easier. He appears to be hard on zero turns, wears them out pretty quickly. The old standard riding mower is his back up when the zero turns go down.
When I bought that Allis, I had been busy for a week, yard needed cutting before I left to make the trip up north. Got back, started to unload the tractors I had bought and my Dear Wife came out giving me heck about stop fooling with those tractors and get the mower busy. I disassembled the carb, cleaned it, put it back on, jumped the tractor off the truck and went to mowing. In less time than it normally took to mow our yard, I had ours and the mother in law's done. Not another word about how much I had spent on "those tractors".
For wide open spaces, it is hard to beat WIDE with horsepower with anything that is zero turn...
David from jax