leonz
Super Member
flailmower saga continued:
I am not trying to argue against or for anything. Last night, I had decided to buy a flail mower with the F rotor (if Agrisupply can get it). This morning, I made a few more telephone calls and, as a result, have decided to reassess that decision. I spent the whole day talking to people about the differences. My decision is between a flail mower and a rear-discharge finish mower. True, that is a rotary-type mower, but most vendors list finish mowers separately from rotary mowers of the heavy duty, single rotating mass type.
Let's assume that a good, 72" (e.g, Caroni) flail mower and a good finsh mower (e.g., Land Pride) cost exactly the same. They do in my town. They both mow grass and are relatively safe compared to the single-blade rotary mower. Which would you chose?
1) Maintenance: Flail is more, but perhaps not a whole lot more. You do not need to grease the spindles each day of use for the finish mower. It has fewer parts and fewer parts to fail. Sharpening is just 3 blades, not 60+, but that is not done very often for either. The flail mower has a rear roller that has come up a few times on this forum as something that gets bent. The finish mower does not. The flail mower tends to burn belts (based on comments here). I have not seen the same frequency of belt failures on finish mowers mentioned.
If you bang up a blade you either mow without one pair or replace the bad one where you have 112 twelve knives and you can remove the offender and its opposite set if you do not have spares and trade blades from either end and be one slicing width short on one side.
You have to drive the old burnt grease out with the fresh grease-dont forget that-you may have a stack of roller bearings in an arbor but it still needs grease everytime you mow or after you mow.
2) Quality of cut: On relatively short grass, the finish mower is probably best.
tears the grass blades
On taller stuff and weeds, the flail chops finer. After a second cutting, is that an advantage? The flail can handle bigger weeds. But, once the big weeds are cut down to size, is that an advantage anymore?
it keeps down all the weeds soo they cannot crawl along the sod
3) Safety: No difference.
wrong
look up the posting with the link to a tennesse news paper that described a town ship that parked its mowers after a judges order-after one of them flew a considerable distance and blew a hole in a house wall and landed near the crib of a child that was in it.
look for iron horses posting about his experience with a brush mower and how quickly he got rid of it after they delivered it.
4) Uneven terrain: The finish mower is built to have a floating deck. The flail is firmly attached to the 3PH. However, accessory wheels are available for the flail to help with uneven terrain. Can the flail be modified and connected with the same type of floating attachment as the finish mower?
Only if you have a gang of rear mounted wide finish flail mowers that trail the prime mover. 3 and larger width hydraulic lifted gang flails do not have them as they are supported by each flails rear roller
The units that do not have rollers are the flail choppers which are wheeled and used to chop corn residue, cotton stalks, peanut vines, late grasses to eliminate bad growth in spring hay- mows the hay after the third cutting after the first heavy frost to aid in spring growth for the first cutting etc.
5) Speed of mowing: I got no quantitative information about that.
the slower you mow the better the cutting with a flail and less clippings in tall sod grass
the closer to the ground you cut the less there is to cut later and fewer weeds- you can get a lot of crop circles with rotaries
The slower you mow with a flail mower the smaller the clippings as it chops them up more per foot of advance and the more trash and weeds you slice to bits.
I run flat out in low range with our wheel horse hydro and wide open thottle to mow our turf to carpet mowing in a spiral pattern-no stopping to turn or braking saves fuel and time and it looks like a golf course even with turf that has been heat stressed and it comes back quicker as the grass blade is stressed much less as it is sliced rather than torn with a rotary blade
and you can go back and mow at 90 degree angles to get more grass mowed or slice up what you have mowed on the turf even finer; you can not do that with a brush mower or a rotary finish mower as it only blows the grass around.
6) Parts: With Caroni, are you dependent on Agrisupply? With a finish mower from a local dealer and a national brand (e.g., LandPride), you have more options. Of course, if you go to a national brand of flail, then there is a significant price difference.
All bearings are metric
All V belts are metric
chains and sprockets are univeral SAE from what I remember, a fifty chain is the same as a 50 chain in italy or here.
the caroni rotor is set to hang blades at 3, 6, 9, 12 oclock and not staggered and that is simply an issue of balancing for their design-if it is a hollow rotor with welded ends-I am unaware if it is solid bar stock or a tube with welded machned end for the pulleys, bearings, and seals.
On our lawn genies the rotor weldment was constructed using machined end weldments and a sheet of steel was bent around the end weldments and welded in place with the knife hangers added later- heavy steel cut to length, bent and welded to the sheet/tube to create the shackle hangers which use spring tensioned hangers and non spring hangers to hold the tapered knives.
Conclusion: Still undecided. Is it a Jaguar vs. Cadillac comparison? I would really appreciate input from longterm users.
Like I have said I dont have a nickle invested and only my 30 years of using them to go by.
the only reason people started mowing the grass and brush around thier homes and farms was to get rid of the snakes hiding in it.
(Mott Mower would still be selling walk behind and towed motorised flail mowers if Alamo had not succeeded in buying them and destroying thier competition and the niche Mott had for walk behind flail mowers)
Prior to this I used a IH lowboy with a 6 foot belly mower on 12 acres of sod and the arbors failed repeatedly and fell out of the mower deck afet having the dealer install new ones so that soured me on rotary mowers.
My second cousins nearly killing his daughter 2 years ago with an impact leg injury only added to my beliefs in how dangerous they are and flailmowers dont do that and are the preferred method of mowing in europe and due to the more stringent safety standards and noise standards they have there.
If the friction clutch shut down methods used for power tools was used for rotary mowers I would feel that they were somewhat safer but as they are driven with an unrestricted drive train I dont see that occuring as they are less expensive to manufacture.
John
BTW: Spellcheck works on other forums I use, but not on this one. Is there a CP setting I have missed? My apologies in advance for misspellings.
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