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Jabber 19-02-2005 11:02 PM

Ride-on Mowers
 

I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.



pied piper 20-02-2005 10:52 AM


"Jabber" wrote in message
...

I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone
had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.

b and q ones fall apart last maybe one year john deere is better



ashnook 20-02-2005 01:57 PM

FWIW I bought a small MTD ride-on mower called PINTO for £750 in April 2001.
I use it to mow a rough grassy area about 1/3 acre with several trees and
bushes in it (and many mole hills). It has coped with this work very well,
mowing once a week in the high season, and I would heartily recommend. it.

Its not beautiful or fast but very manoeuvrable, starts easily and is
reliable. Does what it says on the tin!

--
Brian
---------------------------------------------
www.ashnookplants.co.uk
Top quality seeds & stuff at value prices!
"Jabber" wrote in message
...

I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone
had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.





r.p.mcmurphy 21-02-2005 09:42 PM

I have John Deere LT170 mulching mower... the only problem i have had with
it is a snapped drive belt(under light load)....cost £40 each time...not
sure id recommend one like mine...unless they swap to gear or chain drive.

Steve
"Jabber" wrote in message
...

I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone
had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.





Peter Stockdale 22-02-2005 05:21 PM


Steve
"Jabber" wrote in message
...

I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do
wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone
had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.


I got a "Champion " from Focus and find that it can't cope with uneven
ground. (£799)
It has a fixed deck although the height of cut is adjustable.
I would definitely go for the more expensive floating deck style next time.
If your lawn is nice and flat a cheapy would probably be o.k.but you cannot
cut right to the edge of the lawn with it, as is not the problem with a twin
blade floater.

Pete
www.thecanalshop.com



Keith 01-03-2005 10:58 PM

Cheap B&Q Mowers are exactly that cheap.
Consider what you want it to do, most cheap ones I have tried do a
miserable job of collecting clippings etc..

They look very poorly constructed as well with very cheap plastics

The chassis are also normally not very strong so towing a trailer for
example may not be practical

I have an acre to mow and easily fill a reasonable trailer whist cutting

The same money would be better spent on a second-hand machine, or stick
with your suggestion of a Deere or Countax, the new JCB Diesel looks
interesting

I looked at lots and in the end bought a second-hand Roper (probably
American), I have been using it regularly without problem for three
years I can even tow a small chain harrow with it.

It is amazing how useful these little machines are,they have a tough
life so go for something the will last.

Jabber wrote:
I need to get a new mower, thinking of John Dere or Countax but do wonder
whether the B&Q ones that are cheaper would be just as good. Has anyone had
any experience of the cheaper models.Rough grass (not Wimbledon standard)
Any advise welcome.



Stan The Man 02-03-2005 11:38 AM

My grass is rough too but I have a 15HP Stiga Park Compact HSP mulching
mower with hydrostatic transmission that copes with it well - as long
as I a) get the first cut of the season in by very soon now and b) mow
regularly.

I bought it new last year for £1700 which isn't the cheapest in
absolute terms but is cheap for a ride-on mulcher. It was a special
deal from http://www.grassland-services.com/detail.asp?prodID=255

What I like about it:

- Very powerful in its class
- Very reliable
- Big wheels, tractor treads
- Articulated body - turns on a sixpence
- No emptying!
- The mulch disappears! I never walk any into the house.
- Easier to clean tilting out-front deck

What I don't like about it:

- Too much power! Sometimes get skid marks on wet lawn
- Tubeless tyres - punctures not easy to fix
- Will dump long grass in slimey piles
- Articulated body demands respect on slopes

Overall, I would recommend this mower. Not emptying a grassbox has
transformed my life!

Stan

David Rance 04-03-2005 08:39 AM

On Mon, 21 Feb 2005, r.p.mcmurphy wrote:

I have John Deere LT170 mulching mower... the only problem i have had with
it is a snapped drive belt(under light load)....cost £40 each time...not
sure id recommend one like mine...unless they swap to gear or chain drive.


Looks to be a nice machine - but expensive!

I'm going to have to buy such a mower this year as my kind neighbour in
Normandy is giving up sheep and I have just under an acre of grass to
keep under control.

Can anyone tell me of a make/model to steer clear of?

David
--
David Rance http://www.mesnil.demon.co.uk
Fido Address: 2:252/110 writing from Caversham, Reading, UK



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