SO a quick initial 1st thoughts (well maybe not quick once I got rolling). Unit arrived assembled and ready to rock with .2hrs on the hour meter. All said and done the unit had 1.9hrs on it when I put it away after a fun evening mowing (what is wrong with us when mowing is fun!?):confused2:
#1 - FAST! This rig is going to cut our mow time at least in half. Due to both straight line speed as well as the ability to carve tight around trees and obstacles. I may not mow at full speed with it given just how rough our property is right now, but it can do it. Even at the speed I was mowing lastnight I was covering ground 2x faster than the old rig struggled to do and it was not even working hard.
#2 - Suspension works wonders. Property in middle is even rougher than I thought and the suspension and seat were working overtime. I do not want to think what it would have been like on a rigid chassis. I will likely work to try and flatten down some of the roughness as it is worse than I thought and needs to be addressed, but our entire property is uneven and I am glad to have gone with the ferris full suspension format as I think it will also save pounding on the unit itself as well as the operator.
#3 - Subtle / refined movements are key. Definitely a learning curve on handling, though after a few min I was pretty solid on it. I tried cutting along edge of porch and house foundation 1st. Probably a bad idea as I was twitching all over, but managed not to bash the deck into anything. Thanks to someone here that made a comment about setting speed with one side and then turning with the other. I am lucky to have large hands, large enough that my hands can be touching when operating the levers. In fact I cross my thumbs to the other lever allowing very subtle adjustments in each lever, I am moving both arms together rather than individually and just shifting hands for direction changes. I also found it helps for doing 3 pt turns at the end of each run as I can set the lever offset for a turn, then pull both straight back together in that offset to reverse turn and then transition right back to forward turn starting the next row. Helped for making sure I didn't pivot on a wheel and leave a divot.
#4 - Learning curve on how to operate on uneven ground. I think on slopes the suspen lets the unit lean a bit and the downhill egde scalps at the base of the slope if I ride laterally along the slope. I had heard about Ferris units and scalping and see what they referred to, it could be this would happen with any ztr though as this is my 1st experience ever with one, but I will be looking at altering our mow approach in a few spots to counter the issue.
#5 - May still need a bagger. The unit chewed thru the grass and spread it much better than the old one, however the growth is so large in a week that it still leaves grass clippings piled everywhere. I have not added a mulch kit, but I fear it is just too much volume to mulch and long term we may have to do a bagger anyway. I will use the old rig to bag this last cut in hopes that getting rid of the heavy cuts clippings might help for the next mow.
Overall I am extremely happy after the initial run. now I need to workout a good program for keeping the unit clean after each mow.