jejeosborne
Veteran Member
Soundguy said:i simply don't think you may have ever mowed in weeds 8' tall?? on an open station trike? with some rain? debris do! land on you simply from driving forward. with no front axle on a trike, ( trike.. remember.. narrow front!! ) the front of the running board is the first contact point for nearly 60% of the stuff hitting the front facing of the tractor.. those tall seedy, weeds then slap ME as they hit the running board and curl over.
I sometimes think you purposefully try to distort what you read / vs what i typed?
i don't think it's possibly to mow for a day in those conditions, and then come out clean and smelling like a rose.. unless you can also walk on water.. raise dead people and started a religion a couple thou years ago.
if the latter is true.. .. my appologies.. don't smite me![]()
I grew up in central Illinois on a real farm with some of the most fertile soil in the country. Drove a few trike John Deere tractors with a hand clutch, old 4020's, and articulating steigers. I will say I haven't mowed 8' weeds in the rain but cut them in the dry days and ended up looking like a mud monster from the sweat and dust combination running full throttle. My only point of this whole discussion, which you continue to avoid, is that sometimes it is not necessary to run at high rpms while using a rotary cutter when the vegetation that is light. Reducing throttle will increase the life of your equipment if nothing else because of the lower vibration and less rpms on the engine.