OTOH, I have a gear lawn tractor, and I hate the transmission. I do a LOT of back n' forth while mowing, and gear is a lousy choice. It probably adds 1/3 to the time required to mow. I'm moving to an HST as soon as I find a good one (I only do vintage mowers).
JayC
Jay,
I'd have to agree, after having played with a Hydro Wheelhorse GT-14.
I had a LOT of fun putting 50 hours in to getting a friend's 1972 Wheel Horse GT-14 operating. It was my first experience with a hydro, (complete with an ELECTRIC PTO, which actually worked when I rewired it--and 'letcrics are NOT my thang) and I would DEFINITELY have rigged up a foot pedal, as the "speed stick" between my legs ('er, on the TRACTOR) WAS COOL, in that you could INCH your way forward (about 1/4" turn on the 25" rears, at a time, due to an ossified drive belt, with a "lump" in it, that made it jerk in 1/4" increments, but it was STILL WAAAAY more controlable than my 1984, 11hp. GEARED Ariens) and I had to weld the center pulley of the Wheelhorse's deck back onto the shaft, to save my buddy $70., PLUS I "tanked and tuned" his carb--such work is not "his bag"--but I
LIKED that mower. All except for no foot control.
Just wondered if you were into the Wheelhorse GT-14's. It's a lot of machine, for an old mower, IMO. Vintage is cool-
upgraded vintage, with a foot control, would be cooler yet, IMO.
And for the record, and speaking of "clutch legs," I put 100,000 miles on the (as far as I know) ORIGINAL clutch on my 1977 Ford Granada (got it with 66,000 miles, femalien owned, and I drove it FOR 12 YEARS), junking it at 170,000, with a still-good engine, tranny, clutch and rear end. What a shame....
I feel that putting 100K on a USED clutch, and having it still be GOOD, until the unibody gave up to the Northeast's OBSESSION WITH SALT ON THE ROADS--arRRRRGGHH (I was driving it for a few months where putting on the brakes made it
STEER FROM THE REAR, like a FORKLIFT)
I feel I have earned the title of a "clutch artist," but I STILL think Hydro is the way to go for garden tractors, or bigger machines, like SCUTS and CUTS.
Of course, had I been born with THREE hands, I might feel differently. But I never understood a HAND control, for the hydro.... It left one of my feet BORED TO DEATH, and both of my hands overworked.
Vintage is cool, however! I have a few 1960's-era Simplicity tractors I will need to divest myself of, if anyone's interested.
Btw--the WheelHorse GT-14 is good for 7.2 mph. The funny thing for me is, I didn't realize that that 7.2 mph was INSTANTANEOUS to pushing the "go lever" forward. With (IIRC) 25" rears, there was no wheel spin--just GO!
Of course, my "friend" took it back, once I was done with my 50-hour "seance," and brought it back from the dead. But he did give me the sweet, Arien's 11hp. gear tractor (with Hi/Lo range, for a total of SIX gears) and with just $200 of parts and a TON of TLC, it has been a great, little lawn mower. Not bad for a 1984 machine--the factory that built the tranny, however, BURNED in 1984, and went out of business (the same year of my Arien's build-date) so I've always been a little nervous, if I ever needed a new tranny. So far, no problems.
But as you say--geared is NOT as EASY, or FUN, as a Hydro, in my humble opinion, of course. People with hundred horse "Big Ag" tractors may have very valid reasons for preferring geared tractors, but for lawn mowers, I would definitely like a HYDRO, IF it was FOOT-OPERATED.
My Hoe