WM75Guy
Elite Member
No problem. Just tape over the openings to keep the dust out.I use to love mowing until I bought a ZT. now it's more of a chore because I can't carry a beer with me.![]()
No problem. Just tape over the openings to keep the dust out.I use to love mowing until I bought a ZT. now it's more of a chore because I can't carry a beer with me.![]()
I honestly have considered this!!!
You could also get a Camelback and just wear it on the front!I honestly have considered this!!!![]()
My solution was to decide it's not a lawn, it's a meadow...I'm of the lawn care school that says "If it's green and the mower can cut it off, it's grass." Consequently, I have several different species of "grass" in my lawn, some even planted on purpose. When I mow, especially this time of year, it looks great when I'm done, but by the next day some species have grown faster than others, and it looks ragged.
I learned long ago that there are things that are a lot more important to me than a lawn that resembles artificial turf. So I sharpen my blades when I think they need it, or when I get the time, and do it with the bench grinder in my garage. I eyeball the angle, check the balance with a cheap balancer I bought 30 years ago.
It's lots easier than sharpening the sickle bar from my old hay mower was before I got an angle grinder. And the blades keep cutting the "grass" just fine.
Same here. Fortunately, the chief aesthetics officer is OK with that.I'm of the lawn care school that says "If it's green and the mower can cut it off, it's grass." Consequently, I have several different species of "grass" in my lawn, some even planted on purpose. When I mow, especially this time of year, it looks great when I'm done, but by the next day some species have grown faster than others, and it looks ragged.
I learned long ago that there are things that are a lot more important to me than a lawn that resembles artificial turf.
I love to mow and find it to be therapeutic. Also drives me nuts to see beautiful homes with sh*tty lawns full of weeds and a foot high. That's just me though!
I'm using some of those Gator blades on my smaller (42") riding mowers and love them. Unfortunately I can't find them for my larger Woods decks. For the Gator-type blades, are you sharpening the edges of "lifting cuts" on the trailing edge of the blade? If so please provide more details. Thanks!I use a jig to get a consistent edge using a 40 or 60g flap disk. Sharpening every 30-40 hours I can keep the tips square, and they get balanced each sharpening.
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I'm using some of those Gator blades on my smaller (42") riding mowers and love them. Unfortunately I can't find them for my larger Woods decks. For the Gator-type blades, are you sharpening the edges of "lifting cuts" on the trailing edge of the blade? If so please provide more details. Thanks!
I was that guy. Paid good money to operate the JD. 5103. 35 Acres a widow owned. She paid me More than I would that's for sure, The Yanmar is my personal mower . Had it setup like this for 15+ yrs..
I'm just slowing down a 7 year mowing business. I usually keep 8-12 sets of blades on hand. I went to one of those gizmos that holds the 4.5" angle grinder at the angle I set it at. Use a 40 grit flapper disk. Love it. I change my blades every day, usually after 3-4 large yards. Sharp blades cut better and faster. And after one day doesn't take much to tweak them back into shape. Which includes balancing. You gotta balance, cuts down on vibration and wearing spindle bearing out. About the tip. It's gotta be as close to a right angle as you can make it, must be a point. I calculated (ex traffic accident investigator) that the mower moves about a hundredth of a foot from the time one end of the blade is at a point till the other end is at the same point. Meaning the tip of the blade cuts 99.9 percent of the grass initially. That's why the tips round off so fast.Yeah, I know, mower blades have been a frequent topic here but it's been awhile and I'm always interested in new opinions, products or ideas.
For many years, I resharpened my blades with varying degrees of success. Usually, I get two seasons out of a set of new blades before they need attention. After resharpening, I'm lucky to get a single season before the cut begins to look ragged. I use an angle grinder with a coarse wheel or flap disk, depending on how much material needs to be removed. I quench frequently to avoid overheating but the temper never seems to be as good as the original.
The biggest problem I have with resharpening is re blunting the blade ends after they round off. It usually means removing 1/4 to 1/2" to square it up. This can cause a balance issue and the vibration is quite noticeable on my 3 spindle, 3pt finish mower. For some reason, it wasn't a problem on my old 2 spindle mower. I try to balance the blades after sharpening but have limited success.
I've also found that high lift blades don't seem to last as long as low or medium lift. The high lift do a better job on wet or damp grass and are more resistant to bending when scalping. I usually mow the first time out with an old set of high lift to clear any obstacles before switching to low lift.
I've come to the conclusion that it's no longer worth my time to sharpen and balance 3 blades every year. I now just replace them every other season. Cost's just under $100 and well worth every penny.
Of course this is just my opinion, YMMV.