Good one
I am sure you have covered this before, but can you give us the pros and cons of a chain vs. a blade? Grass, brush, saplings, safety, etc. Such an odd concept in the U.S.
Thanks.
Sure. No problem.
Pros:
- Ability to handle rocks, stumps, or whatever it's hidden under the brush without damaging the blades
- Handles higher, thicker and dense brush much easier, but brush like saplings, small trees (I've done up to 3"), canes trees(we have a lot of that) and pretty much any brush of that style.
- No need to sharpening the blades
- Will mow thicker stuff than the blades, as in, diameter of the brush
- Can use either 2 or 4 chains per spindle if there is enough HP to power that
- Replacing the chains is really cheap
- Shreds the brush into smaller pieces, making it easier to decompose
- Blades can break more easily, while chains take a lot more abuse
- Brush cut with a blade will grow faster versus the shredding action of the chains
Cons:
- Requires slightly more HP, hence the small sizes of mower compared to the ones in the US. IE: My 35HP tractor handles a 52" cutting width chain mower, while with blades, the same tractor would most likely use a 5 or even 6 ft mower
- Requires slightly slower ground speed to give time for the chains to shred the material
- Cutting dense grass will load the tractor a lot more than just brush, to the point of bogging down if going too fast. For this, I do recommend blades if I know for sure that it won't find any rocks, but I always find rocks.
- Doesn't leave as nice of a finish versus a blade mower, but it's a brush mower anyway, not a finish mower for a lawn.
Safety wise, I don't consider this anymore dangerous than a blade mower. All the mowers we have, use a chain skirt on the front and back of the mower, which work amazingly well on keeping the debris contained. There is still the occasional throw of a stick or rock. As far as chain breaking, last time I used the mower, I broke the last link of one chain after hitting a couple of rocks. Both halves of the link fell exactly where it broke.
It's slightly less efficient than a blade mower but for the type of brush we have here, this style is what works the best. This comes from factory this way and it's compliant with all the safety standards in Europe. Blades are actually an option from factory.
This is a good video I like to share. It really shows where the chains will shine:
Limpeza de Terreno em SIntra muitos carrascos - YouTube
For the OP, sorry about the slight off topic.