eagle107
Gold Member
If you mow fast like me, then you should get the mower with the higher fpm to maintain the cut quality.  I had used flail mowers to cut my property for over 17 years: had a Mott Hammer Knife flail mower and then a New Holland 918H flail mower.   The flail mowers will last a long time as my uncle still uses his Ford 917 which 30+ years old.  However, three issues I had with my flail mowers.  First, you need to mower slow with them especially if your property is bumpy.  If you go too fast, the flail mower will start to bounce with the backend roller and give you an uneven cut.  Depending on how low the blades are set for finishing, the mower will also dig into the ground when it bounces causing a ripple affect making your property even bumpier.  Second, while some flails float, they do not float as much as the finishing mowers.  If you have a lot of dips and small hills, the finishing mower will follow the contours of the property better than a flail mower.  My uncle just had to use my Woods PRD8400 finishing mower to cut his new strip of property because his 917 flail would not float across the ground's contours enough giving him an even cut.  
The last issue with a flail mower is the cost to replace the cutting knives. The New Holland 918H has reversible cutting knives and you could also re-sharpen them, but the knives will get to a point when the indentations in the metal (from scalping, hitting rocks and hitting sticks on the ground) are too deep to sharpen and you have to purchase a new set of knives. The New Holland 918H flail mower had 96 knives and it cost me $325.00 for a set of replacement knives. To replace the blades on my Woods PRD8400 finishing mower would cost me $90 to $100. Flail mowers have their place and are good mowers, but if your 30 to 40 acres are bumpy like mine and you need to go fast to get the cutting job done, then a finishing mower would be your better bet. I would go with the TM100 Rhino.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			The last issue with a flail mower is the cost to replace the cutting knives. The New Holland 918H has reversible cutting knives and you could also re-sharpen them, but the knives will get to a point when the indentations in the metal (from scalping, hitting rocks and hitting sticks on the ground) are too deep to sharpen and you have to purchase a new set of knives. The New Holland 918H flail mower had 96 knives and it cost me $325.00 for a set of replacement knives. To replace the blades on my Woods PRD8400 finishing mower would cost me $90 to $100. Flail mowers have their place and are good mowers, but if your 30 to 40 acres are bumpy like mine and you need to go fast to get the cutting job done, then a finishing mower would be your better bet. I would go with the TM100 Rhino.
			
				Last edited: