Rear Finish Mower RFM - Where do you store it?

   / RFM - Where do you store it? #1  

FormulaPro

New member
Joined
Apr 8, 2009
Messages
3
Greetings tractor owners!

I am new to this site - not new to my 'bota BX23. I just moved to the mid-atlantic area and built a house on 3 acres. I am about to pull the trigger on a LandPride 60" RFM after reading everything I could find on this site about RFMs.

My question - do any of you guys store your mower deck outside? I have a two car garage with the kubota taking up one space. The deck will occupy a fair amount of garage realestate... until I get my detached built.

Great site... lots of great information!
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #2  
I've bought 3 enclosures similar to this one only I bought them at Menards and they were about $279. We keep hay in two of them and my tractor and implements in the other. We plan to build a barn in a few years, but these have held up great now for 3 years and for that price it beats leaving things sit outside.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #3  
My father keeps his RFM stored outside, he covers it for winter season only. If I were in your shoes and if there are NO winds in your area, perhaps the portable canvas shed is an option until your detached built ? I tried the portable shed where I live but in a windy area and one day the storm blew it away and destroyed it. Sometimes I wish I went with a simple tarp until I finally built my garage addition.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #4  
A decent machine shed would cost more than the combined sum paid for all my ag implements. Except for a PTO spreader, the rest (13 altogether) get parked in the pasture - uncovered - year 'round. That includes two rotary cutters and a RFM. Everything's been out there for years, little worse for the exposure other than the expected paint fade.

//greg//
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #5  
Mine sets outside year around just make sure to keep painted & oiled to keep rust down.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #6  
If a barn is in the near future and this is the only implement you are keeping outside might just consider buying a tarp w/ an elastic bottom to keep it covered and then you will have the tarp for future use once you work out your storage situation. This is what I do w/ my landscape rake.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #7  
You'd be surprised at how well one of the 'tarp carports' will hold up, in BIG WIND, if the wind is considered when it's installed.

Several people have told me that they'll just blow away, but I've had some up for more than four years.

I have used several of them, purchased from Costco. I drove 18" long pieces of electrical conduit that slip fit inside the leg tubes, cross-drilled and pinned in place with the stock pins.
Once the tarp is trashed, they can also be covered with roofing metal (delta rib, corrugated, or ?). I currently have a short shed made for my tractor and another 10x20x10 (peak height) that I added some horizontal 2x4s to the inside of the legs and added corrugated metal to for a wood shed.
It's not the most beautiful, but very functional-bought the corrugated second hand and caulked the nail holes in the roof.
A very good short term/low cost storage solution.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #8  
consider buying a tarp w/ an elastic bottom to keep it covered .
Strongly disagree. Tarps promote condensation, condensation breeds rust. Let the implements open to the elements - wind and sun will soon evaporate what rain and snow leaves behind

//greg//
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #9  
Strongly disagree. Tarps promote condensation, condensation breeds rust. Let the implements open to the elements - wind and sun will soon evaporate what rain and snow leaves behind

//greg//

I agree about the rust but my tarp that I use in this fashion has breath holes throughout. I have covered my rake this way for 2 1/2 years now when I am not using (mainly in winter months) and have no rust on my rake.
 
   / RFM - Where do you store it? #10  
Strongly disagree. Tarps promote condensation, condensation breeds rust. Let the implements open to the elements - wind and sun will soon evaporate what rain and snow leaves behind

I agree (does that mean I agree with Greg or disagree with OP?) :rolleyes:

We built a log home. We had the logs under a cover. I was later told by an engineer that this was the absolutely WORST thing we could have done since the tarp actually held the moisture in.

He said we would have been better off letting the logs get rained on and simply air dry.

I leave my mower outdoors without a tarp.

I'd put it in a barn if we had one :(
 
 

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