Rivet
I am new to this, for sure. Until this house, I had a couple decades with a lead-acid B&D push mower (yes, starting back in the late 90s when battery was a real novelty), and it did all I needed. So bigger mowers are new to me -- the 30" riding mower I have now is the largest thing I've every used.
I have terminology issues between what I call the walk-behind and what I call the push, still not clear on what they should be called.
I currently also have a Poulan Pro 21" self propelled. It may be a "cheapie" but the propulsion is on the rear wheels, not the front wheels. I hated it -- upgrading to the Honda riding mower was a huge improvement in my quality of life (putting aside the effort to keep it going).
You all sound convincing in your endorsement of a high quality push mower. I have to admit, it's a hard sell -- I look at a 21" mower with 6" wheels and rear wheel propulsion like mine, and see that for $1000 I can buy a 21" mower with 8" wheels and rear wheel propulsion. It may indeed be "higher quality" and "last longer" and "start easier" and lots of other meaningful descriptors (I'm not being sarcastic here) -- but does it really climb the hill better than my push mower (without the wheels slipping/spinning like mine) or do the yard faster/eaier than my 30" ride on mower? If it really does, it's an easy decision. If I spend that coin and realize that the biggest benefit is it lasts longer, that's an expensive mistake.
Of course, that's the conundrum here. I *know* what I have. Anything else -- anything -- is a guess and a gamble. A new one, if I guess right, is a win -- or sold at significant loss. An old one, if I guess wrong, can be resold or scrapped. I certainly am hearing a chorus of "get a push mower" (and by that, I mean a residential style, not a commercial style -- regardless of quality). Maybe I can ask around for friends who may have a variety of units I can try, and see if my negativity is related to MY mower, not the TYPE of mower.
Oh, about wheels. Mine is rear wheel drive. That Honda mentioned (the HRX217HYA) doesn't say anything, but I sure think I see drive mechanism on the front wheels. Is it perhaps 4WD? That could make a big difference on the hill.