RLW_LT2138
Member
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2013
- Threads
- 9
- Messages
- 25
Background:
We have a wooded lot. It is a little under three acres with probably close to a thousand trees on it. It is on the side of a hill thus a large portion has a 4-to-7-degree slope.
We are currently mowing it with a Cub Cadet LT2138 lawn tractor, which has a 38-inch deck. It is taking over six hours plus string trimming. There are many places where anything wider than the 38-inch deck would not go and we would end up with even more trimming. If the deck were a little smaller, more of it could be mowed leaving less to trim. I had to put lugged rear tires, like real tractor tires, on the cub to handle the wet conditions without getting stuck. The turf tires just didn’t do it.
Our yard is not your typical manicured suburban yard. It is full of trees and fairly ruff. See picture.
I was looking at the small zero-turn mowers from Toro and Hustler as those are the only ones I have found offering a deck of 38” or less.
Questions:
We have a wooded lot. It is a little under three acres with probably close to a thousand trees on it. It is on the side of a hill thus a large portion has a 4-to-7-degree slope.
We are currently mowing it with a Cub Cadet LT2138 lawn tractor, which has a 38-inch deck. It is taking over six hours plus string trimming. There are many places where anything wider than the 38-inch deck would not go and we would end up with even more trimming. If the deck were a little smaller, more of it could be mowed leaving less to trim. I had to put lugged rear tires, like real tractor tires, on the cub to handle the wet conditions without getting stuck. The turf tires just didn’t do it.
Our yard is not your typical manicured suburban yard. It is full of trees and fairly ruff. See picture.
I was looking at the small zero-turn mowers from Toro and Hustler as those are the only ones I have found offering a deck of 38” or less.
Questions:
- Is a 7-degree slope too much of a slope for a zero-turn? In many sections of the yard, you are going up the hill while also going along the side of the hill.
- Due to the constant supply of small sticks and black walnuts, I’m sharping the blades after each mowing. Totally clearing the yard of all sticks and nuts is just not possible! How hard is it to remove and sharpen the blades?
- Parts of the yard are almost always wet. Will I be able to replace the rear tires with something with a more aggressive tread than the standard turf tire?
- Will a zero-turn get close enough to the trees that I might not need to use the string trimmer?
- Do the blade spindles and other deck shafts on these smaller mowers have grease zerks?