I don't have a lot of experience in buying lawn mowers. Mine have lasted decades. I do have a lot of experience in owning a lawn mower. My yard is .41 acres. So if anything, I have a bit more mowing to do than you do.
My second lawnmower was a Murray, I think. The important thing was the engine. It had a Honda engine. A nice feature that may be impossible to find today with the nanny state protecting you from yourself, is the engine speed was totally independent from any walking speed. In other words, you could run it at idle over areas like gravel or newly seeded grass that had just started growing and then go to full throttle in the thicker grass.
The second most important thing to me was the lawn mower deck. Some lawn mowers are designed to bag efficiently...and they stick a mulching blade on it and call it a mulching lawn mower. You want a deck that'll let the clippings be tossed upwards and then be recut as they fall.
I kept that lawn mower for 26+ years with little to no maintenance. The oil was changed every year. I'd change the sparkplug (or clean it) about every 7-10 years. You can blow out the loose debris from the air filter with your leaf blower as you're cleaning up. I generally would change the air filter when I changed the spark plug...which wasn't often at all. I didn't baby it, and it kept going like the Energizer bunny.
Spare parts? Didn't need any. When I did need a spark plug or air filter, the local hardware store sold them. They're cheap and pretty standard. The only other thing I changed was the wheels. The hub area would eventually wear out. But that took a lot of use and many years.
I bought push lawn mowers. When I get to needing a "self-propelled" lawnmower, I'll probably move into an old folks home. I've used lawnmowers with a drive before and they have their drawbacks. If you're trying to cut close to trees, flower beds and the like, you don't want your wheels spinning away, or to be trying to hold the lawnmower back. If your grass is fairly new and wet (like in the Spring or Fall), having those wheels spinning while you're barely moving can rip the grass up. While the manufacturers have probably made that drawback a lesser problem, my guess is that is the part that will fail the most. The complexity will lead to failure. And when it fails, you have a heavy lawnmower to push till you buy another or fix it.
I bought another lawn mower finally after having that second one last for so long. I tried to find virtually the same thing. I bought a Craftsman M140 from Lowe's Hardware. https://www.lowes.com/pd/CRAFTSMAN-...-Push-Lawn-Mower-with-Honda-Engine/1000705996
That model is no longer sold, but the link will show you what it looks like and what features it has...or doesn't have.
Electric lawnmowers...you're at the borderline with 1/3 acre on making those work well. The batteries are the weak link. If you use the batteries a lot, they'll last. Sometimes. But if you put them away (like over the winter), they may not. And the battery you use for a lawnmower is generally larger than you'd use for hand tools. The cost of new batteries, can easily get close to what you spend on a new gas lawnmower. I bought a number of Ryobi hand tools. The design seemed good and the price was decent. I pulled out my edger to use the next spring and the battery was dead. A new battery was close to what I paid for the edger+battery originally. And you won't know the battery is dead till you get ready to use it. Count on buying two batteries, because if you get almost done...and your battery runs out of juice...and the rain is coming in...well, that sucks.
Good luck.
My second lawnmower was a Murray, I think. The important thing was the engine. It had a Honda engine. A nice feature that may be impossible to find today with the nanny state protecting you from yourself, is the engine speed was totally independent from any walking speed. In other words, you could run it at idle over areas like gravel or newly seeded grass that had just started growing and then go to full throttle in the thicker grass.
The second most important thing to me was the lawn mower deck. Some lawn mowers are designed to bag efficiently...and they stick a mulching blade on it and call it a mulching lawn mower. You want a deck that'll let the clippings be tossed upwards and then be recut as they fall.
I kept that lawn mower for 26+ years with little to no maintenance. The oil was changed every year. I'd change the sparkplug (or clean it) about every 7-10 years. You can blow out the loose debris from the air filter with your leaf blower as you're cleaning up. I generally would change the air filter when I changed the spark plug...which wasn't often at all. I didn't baby it, and it kept going like the Energizer bunny.
Spare parts? Didn't need any. When I did need a spark plug or air filter, the local hardware store sold them. They're cheap and pretty standard. The only other thing I changed was the wheels. The hub area would eventually wear out. But that took a lot of use and many years.
I bought push lawn mowers. When I get to needing a "self-propelled" lawnmower, I'll probably move into an old folks home. I've used lawnmowers with a drive before and they have their drawbacks. If you're trying to cut close to trees, flower beds and the like, you don't want your wheels spinning away, or to be trying to hold the lawnmower back. If your grass is fairly new and wet (like in the Spring or Fall), having those wheels spinning while you're barely moving can rip the grass up. While the manufacturers have probably made that drawback a lesser problem, my guess is that is the part that will fail the most. The complexity will lead to failure. And when it fails, you have a heavy lawnmower to push till you buy another or fix it.
I bought another lawn mower finally after having that second one last for so long. I tried to find virtually the same thing. I bought a Craftsman M140 from Lowe's Hardware. https://www.lowes.com/pd/CRAFTSMAN-...-Push-Lawn-Mower-with-Honda-Engine/1000705996
That model is no longer sold, but the link will show you what it looks like and what features it has...or doesn't have.
Electric lawnmowers...you're at the borderline with 1/3 acre on making those work well. The batteries are the weak link. If you use the batteries a lot, they'll last. Sometimes. But if you put them away (like over the winter), they may not. And the battery you use for a lawnmower is generally larger than you'd use for hand tools. The cost of new batteries, can easily get close to what you spend on a new gas lawnmower. I bought a number of Ryobi hand tools. The design seemed good and the price was decent. I pulled out my edger to use the next spring and the battery was dead. A new battery was close to what I paid for the edger+battery originally. And you won't know the battery is dead till you get ready to use it. Count on buying two batteries, because if you get almost done...and your battery runs out of juice...and the rain is coming in...well, that sucks.
Good luck.
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