beppington
Elite Member
I see you got it figured out, but I'll still add:
For best results, the knives must be set to come very close to the ground. I like to lower the flail onto the ground, then lift it just a smidge with the 3PH lever, then turn it on.
Also, that looks like a lot of grass to try to cut to manicured in 1 pass. When there's a large amount of material inside the mower, I think that can fold the knives back & hold them there so they're not able to cut. You probably had enough vegetation to require 2 passes to get a good looking "lawn" result.
Also, with the stripes I see: Did you check to make sure there are no missing knives? If they're all these, it's prob that 2 or 3 knives were being held back & therefore unable to cut.
Also, I don't think a flail has much in the way of upward vacuum like a finish mower, so large amounts of vegetation can sorta bog down the whole process, including pushing down grass that otherwise might stay standing & be cut.
For best results, the knives must be set to come very close to the ground. I like to lower the flail onto the ground, then lift it just a smidge with the 3PH lever, then turn it on.
Also, that looks like a lot of grass to try to cut to manicured in 1 pass. When there's a large amount of material inside the mower, I think that can fold the knives back & hold them there so they're not able to cut. You probably had enough vegetation to require 2 passes to get a good looking "lawn" result.
Also, with the stripes I see: Did you check to make sure there are no missing knives? If they're all these, it's prob that 2 or 3 knives were being held back & therefore unable to cut.
Also, I don't think a flail has much in the way of upward vacuum like a finish mower, so large amounts of vegetation can sorta bog down the whole process, including pushing down grass that otherwise might stay standing & be cut.