bertsmobile1
Lawn Royalty
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2014
- Threads
- 65
- Messages
- 24,995
Just serviced a 2014 Z master 3000.
Could be we get a slightly different version down here
Grease nipples on all 3 spindles and on tensioner arm.
Grease ports ( you have to fit your own nipples ) on the caster shafts.
Grease nipples on the caster wheels
Grease nipples on the 4 deck hangers
grease nipple on the drive tensioner arm
And not sure but I think there was nipples on the deck stays as well.
Did a Craftsman 42" residential ZTR last week
2 only grease points on the caster pivots
Sold 5 used engines this year to domestic customers who blew their engines because they did not check the oil and threw a rod.
Did one commercial repower this year because the mower was using too much oil. The owner had actually been keeping records and it ws at a lever where it could run out of oil in a week if the workers failed to do their DAILY CHECKS.
So no I am not calling you stupid and no you don't need tertiary qualifications to mow lawns or look after a mower.
But all of my commercial customers except 1 regularly maintain their mowers between my servicings.
Most of my domestic customers never so much as clean down their mowers let alone actually do any maintenance.
Some will but most don't.
Ask any repairer and you will get the same stories like getting a call out because the mower is cutting funny to find there is 2lb in one tyre.
Or the accumulated grass clipping have rotted through the deck so much the spindles are dragged inwards by the belt tension.
Or "my mower won't start" to find no oil so the oil switch earths out the coil.
Or no fuel in tank, or fuel tap turned off.
There is a YTH2648 in the shop at the moment for a service because it "won't drive"
The domestic owner, who runs a national supply chain so is not illiterate, never bothered to read the manual and has been mulching with cut height 1/2".
This causes a debris build up under the mower till it stops the brake pedal fully sitting on the dissengage stop so the clutch slips or in a previous case the brake did not disengage.
Both of these men are very intelligent, but they just don't give a toss about their mowers just so long as it cuts the grass and a YTH 2648 costs around $ 7,000 down here so they wern't cheap either.
Funny enough this sort of information gets back to the mower companies, who would have thought, a dealer's mechanic actually talking to a rep or an instructor at a service seminar.
So more & more the domestic mowers are going "maintenance free".
OTOH the lawn care operator needs his machine to be working because if it isn't working, he can't go & borrow his neighbours mower while his in in the shop.
Most lawncare operators go to the effort of reading the owners manual , cover to cover and make sure their equipment is maintained at least to the minimum level stipulated.
Some of them even buy the technical serice manuals because the machine is their livelihood, no mower = no money.
Could be we get a slightly different version down here
Grease nipples on all 3 spindles and on tensioner arm.
Grease ports ( you have to fit your own nipples ) on the caster shafts.
Grease nipples on the caster wheels
Grease nipples on the 4 deck hangers
grease nipple on the drive tensioner arm
And not sure but I think there was nipples on the deck stays as well.
Did a Craftsman 42" residential ZTR last week
2 only grease points on the caster pivots
Sold 5 used engines this year to domestic customers who blew their engines because they did not check the oil and threw a rod.
Did one commercial repower this year because the mower was using too much oil. The owner had actually been keeping records and it ws at a lever where it could run out of oil in a week if the workers failed to do their DAILY CHECKS.
So no I am not calling you stupid and no you don't need tertiary qualifications to mow lawns or look after a mower.
But all of my commercial customers except 1 regularly maintain their mowers between my servicings.
Most of my domestic customers never so much as clean down their mowers let alone actually do any maintenance.
Some will but most don't.
Ask any repairer and you will get the same stories like getting a call out because the mower is cutting funny to find there is 2lb in one tyre.
Or the accumulated grass clipping have rotted through the deck so much the spindles are dragged inwards by the belt tension.
Or "my mower won't start" to find no oil so the oil switch earths out the coil.
Or no fuel in tank, or fuel tap turned off.
There is a YTH2648 in the shop at the moment for a service because it "won't drive"
The domestic owner, who runs a national supply chain so is not illiterate, never bothered to read the manual and has been mulching with cut height 1/2".
This causes a debris build up under the mower till it stops the brake pedal fully sitting on the dissengage stop so the clutch slips or in a previous case the brake did not disengage.
Both of these men are very intelligent, but they just don't give a toss about their mowers just so long as it cuts the grass and a YTH 2648 costs around $ 7,000 down here so they wern't cheap either.
Funny enough this sort of information gets back to the mower companies, who would have thought, a dealer's mechanic actually talking to a rep or an instructor at a service seminar.
So more & more the domestic mowers are going "maintenance free".
OTOH the lawn care operator needs his machine to be working because if it isn't working, he can't go & borrow his neighbours mower while his in in the shop.
Most lawncare operators go to the effort of reading the owners manual , cover to cover and make sure their equipment is maintained at least to the minimum level stipulated.
Some of them even buy the technical serice manuals because the machine is their livelihood, no mower = no money.