daugen
Epic Contributor
Also Zero turns are a pain on hills. Can be more than a pain...
zero turns can be terribly dangerous on hills when the grass is even the slightest bit wet. I slid down a large sand mound and crashed through a split rail fence. Thankfully only my pride was damaged. Any of my garden tractors would never have slid. A close friend, retired family doctor, slid down an incline on wet grass and went upside down into his pond. Almost died stuck under the mower in the mud under water.
Do NOT use zero turns on wet grass and any kind of slope. Many, many examples of folks going totally out of control, like the teacup ride in the
amusement park. Flat lawn, you bet, there is nothing faster to mow with. Just remember that as we get older not all of us want to mow at 10mph or more that they advertise in inflated claims. Beats you to death, even on a Ferris with full suspension, which I owned. And I mowed a friend's 18 acre field once with that zero turn and I could hardly walk when I was done.
My next door neighbor bought a 2 series JD with a belly mower, and no FEL. He traded it in a year later for a zero turn and saved a full hour mowing. But he has to borrow my tractor when he needs the FEL function. He confided in me that if he had bought the FEL, he probably never would have gotten rid of the tractor. Without a FEL, you lose a huge amount of utility. Besides, with quick disconnects, you can drop off the bucket in less than a minute and put it back on in the same time. With the bucket off you can see a lot better and sticks out less. If you are worried about mowing with a bucket on, there's an idea. But no SCUT or CUT was meant to do close mowing in your front yard, they are too compromised for that, doing so many other things well.
If your lawn is pretty open without a lot of shrubbery and you have space to turn, mowing with a SCUT or CUT works fine. You just go slower...but you can mark up your lawn if you've had rain. Most new tractors come with R4's, which are a compromise between turf and ag.
But they can definitely leave marks on your lawn, so also a function of how often your lawn gets soggy.
zero turns can be terribly dangerous on hills when the grass is even the slightest bit wet. I slid down a large sand mound and crashed through a split rail fence. Thankfully only my pride was damaged. Any of my garden tractors would never have slid. A close friend, retired family doctor, slid down an incline on wet grass and went upside down into his pond. Almost died stuck under the mower in the mud under water.
Do NOT use zero turns on wet grass and any kind of slope. Many, many examples of folks going totally out of control, like the teacup ride in the
amusement park. Flat lawn, you bet, there is nothing faster to mow with. Just remember that as we get older not all of us want to mow at 10mph or more that they advertise in inflated claims. Beats you to death, even on a Ferris with full suspension, which I owned. And I mowed a friend's 18 acre field once with that zero turn and I could hardly walk when I was done.
My next door neighbor bought a 2 series JD with a belly mower, and no FEL. He traded it in a year later for a zero turn and saved a full hour mowing. But he has to borrow my tractor when he needs the FEL function. He confided in me that if he had bought the FEL, he probably never would have gotten rid of the tractor. Without a FEL, you lose a huge amount of utility. Besides, with quick disconnects, you can drop off the bucket in less than a minute and put it back on in the same time. With the bucket off you can see a lot better and sticks out less. If you are worried about mowing with a bucket on, there's an idea. But no SCUT or CUT was meant to do close mowing in your front yard, they are too compromised for that, doing so many other things well.
If your lawn is pretty open without a lot of shrubbery and you have space to turn, mowing with a SCUT or CUT works fine. You just go slower...but you can mark up your lawn if you've had rain. Most new tractors come with R4's, which are a compromise between turf and ag.
But they can definitely leave marks on your lawn, so also a function of how often your lawn gets soggy.