I've never worked on that many commercial mowers but I've never seen anymore with over 4200 hours on it. That was an old one with an analog hour meter with the little wheel that spun like an old odometer on a car.
Most of the mowers that I've seen that are pretty hard worked start having some pretty major repairs in the 1200 to 1400 hour range but some will go up to 1800 or so.
Things like slipped valve guides where they will continue to mow for the whole rest of the day as best they can so instead of being able to fix it you have to replace the entire head.
Had to do that on a Kawasaki 2 years ago. It had 1,200 and something hours on it in a John Deere 50 inch or so chassis.
I think the highest Briggs V-Twin I've seen that wasn't a vanguard was either 1400 or 1600 hours.
That's well beyond what the average homeowner will ever get from machine because most of the time it'll be so many years until they can accumulate that many hours that when some needed repair comes up they will just decide to buy a new one.
The average person in my area only plus between 25 and 35 hours a year on any type of mower and most people have a 42 in front engine rider.
So if it's a zero turn the hours could be a little lower.
The fact is I have had tons of riders come in that are 12 to 15 years old it only have between 220 and 270 hours on them so you can do the math.
In this many years they're pretty beat up and they don't really think it's outrageous or uncalled for to need to buy a new machine.
I believe this is why on the newer machines a lot of the homeowner ones are no longer having the cheap little digital meter even though there's already a spot in the dash and sometimes a hole that they have to actually put a plug into when they delete it but I believe it's incriminating.
When a machine is 12 years old and an engineer transmission failure makes you decide to replace it you don't feel like you've gotten ripped off but when you look down and see it's only got 194 hours on it you really feel cheated!!
I would say some of those old skag walk behind mowers with the pistol grips and the drive belt on each side and the old Kawasaki singles what were they 420 or 460 maybe an FS 460??
I would say some of those machines have 5,000 to 10,000 hours on it but for the most part on the zero turns and stuff made in the past 20 years you'll be lucky to get 1200 to 1500 hours without it needing at least a hydro replaced or some major engine work or an engine transplant.
As Bert said, people really do bad things to these without knowing it
I tell people all the time and this is even for a simple little Craftsman 42-in mower and not a big expensive ZTR but "if it's mowing or just moving the speed has to be in the normal full speed operation position"
You do not know for 2 hours and get the thing up to full operating temperature and then turn off the blades and I look down to half speed or all the way to Lowes it will run and then drive the thing two or three hundred feet to park it or to put it on a trailer!!
This spikes the hydro temperature excessively because you just lowered the engine RPMs from around 3200 to 3500 down to around 1300 and the engine speed is directly related to how fast the little fans on top of the hydros are spinning.
Also, drive them like a Cadillac and like you don't want to spill your beer!
I literally had a guy pull up in front of my shop with a nice newer Ford truck and a gorgeous new enclosed trailer probably 16 ft long or more.
He had two bobcats on it and as he backed one off because he wanted me to look at it because it wasn't moving right like it had a weak hydro...
He backed it off of his trailer turn slightly to the left and then did a burnout and literally spun one of the tires.
I instantly thought...
I see why you have a hydro problem now.
These things should be driven like a Cadillac and you shouldn't tow or pull anything with them.
They are not tractors even if they have a hitch on the back or even if someone has welded a hitch on the back. They are made to cut grass.
Most of the mowers that I've seen that are pretty hard worked start having some pretty major repairs in the 1200 to 1400 hour range but some will go up to 1800 or so.
Things like slipped valve guides where they will continue to mow for the whole rest of the day as best they can so instead of being able to fix it you have to replace the entire head.
Had to do that on a Kawasaki 2 years ago. It had 1,200 and something hours on it in a John Deere 50 inch or so chassis.
I think the highest Briggs V-Twin I've seen that wasn't a vanguard was either 1400 or 1600 hours.
That's well beyond what the average homeowner will ever get from machine because most of the time it'll be so many years until they can accumulate that many hours that when some needed repair comes up they will just decide to buy a new one.
The average person in my area only plus between 25 and 35 hours a year on any type of mower and most people have a 42 in front engine rider.
So if it's a zero turn the hours could be a little lower.
The fact is I have had tons of riders come in that are 12 to 15 years old it only have between 220 and 270 hours on them so you can do the math.
In this many years they're pretty beat up and they don't really think it's outrageous or uncalled for to need to buy a new machine.
I believe this is why on the newer machines a lot of the homeowner ones are no longer having the cheap little digital meter even though there's already a spot in the dash and sometimes a hole that they have to actually put a plug into when they delete it but I believe it's incriminating.
When a machine is 12 years old and an engineer transmission failure makes you decide to replace it you don't feel like you've gotten ripped off but when you look down and see it's only got 194 hours on it you really feel cheated!!
I would say some of those old skag walk behind mowers with the pistol grips and the drive belt on each side and the old Kawasaki singles what were they 420 or 460 maybe an FS 460??
I would say some of those machines have 5,000 to 10,000 hours on it but for the most part on the zero turns and stuff made in the past 20 years you'll be lucky to get 1200 to 1500 hours without it needing at least a hydro replaced or some major engine work or an engine transplant.
As Bert said, people really do bad things to these without knowing it
I tell people all the time and this is even for a simple little Craftsman 42-in mower and not a big expensive ZTR but "if it's mowing or just moving the speed has to be in the normal full speed operation position"
You do not know for 2 hours and get the thing up to full operating temperature and then turn off the blades and I look down to half speed or all the way to Lowes it will run and then drive the thing two or three hundred feet to park it or to put it on a trailer!!
This spikes the hydro temperature excessively because you just lowered the engine RPMs from around 3200 to 3500 down to around 1300 and the engine speed is directly related to how fast the little fans on top of the hydros are spinning.
Also, drive them like a Cadillac and like you don't want to spill your beer!
I literally had a guy pull up in front of my shop with a nice newer Ford truck and a gorgeous new enclosed trailer probably 16 ft long or more.
He had two bobcats on it and as he backed one off because he wanted me to look at it because it wasn't moving right like it had a weak hydro...
He backed it off of his trailer turn slightly to the left and then did a burnout and literally spun one of the tires.
I instantly thought...
I see why you have a hydro problem now.
These things should be driven like a Cadillac and you shouldn't tow or pull anything with them.
They are not tractors even if they have a hitch on the back or even if someone has welded a hitch on the back. They are made to cut grass.