Electric mowers

farmerjan

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Does anyone have one? Do you like it? I am looking to replace my riding mower and looking at electric ride on ones. Do not want a zero turn, I want a garden/lawn tractor type so I can pull a dump cart or the lawn sweeper behind it. Not alot to choose from and I am not in a rush.
But this is the time of year to do it. Season is pretty much over up here in Va.
Gas ride ons are in the 2-3,000 range new. Zero turns are 2,000-5,000. I found a Cub Cadet that is an electric one, 1.5 hours mow time, 4 hr recharge, that has a "hitch" to be able to pull a cart or bagger etc. Different web sites have it from 2400 to 5,000.

I don't want to deal with gas, oil, belts, spark plugs... all that.... This is not a "go green" decision.. it is a I hate to do mechanical maintenance stuff.
So looking for opinions. Walk behind or a riding one. Tell me what you like/don't like... problems or bad service or whatever...

I have a battery weed eater and really like it. They don't make a riding mower with a battery.
 

farmerjan

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Just an update. I wound up getting a battery self propelled push type mower It's a Greenworks... I went with the 60 V line as they have alot of different things in the 60V line. They also have a couple other "lines" that are 24 V and an 80 V line... 60V was the most popular in this area and the price was good as I got it on a sale at TSC. I really like it. It won't tackle the 3 ft high "hayfield" but does good on stuff that is up to 1 ft high. The self propelled took a little bit to get used to because I would forget and try "pushing it" and then realized I didn't have to "man handle it" so much. You can set it from slow to very fast...
The push button to start is GREAT... it is quieter than the gas ones... it has plenty of cutting power. It has many height settings, side discharge or a small bagger that goes on the back...
So far I can't find anything that I don't like about it.

The riding one is next for me... they make both a zero turn and a "tractor type" mower... and they are the only one that has a small "carry stuff" cargo space behind the seat.

I got the extended warranty just to be covered if anything goes wrong... not cheap but this way I am totally covered.

Would get another in a heart beat. They make weed eaters, chain saws, snow blowers... all sorts of things.

I did not get it to be "green" and all that happy horse sh!t.... I got it because I do not want to deal with gas and oil and spark plugs and carburetors ......and pulling a starter pull with shoulders that just aren't as good as they used to be. It is heavy enough to know it is there... and you can mow just by pushing on flat or easy places, use the self propelled with an easy little lever to hold on the handle, use the self propelled without the blade turning ... and has cute headlights that really are nice when mowing in the cool of the late evening.
 

wyoDreamer

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We have a battery push mower for the "detail" work around our place. I have a real hard time starting mechanicals with a pull cord. They hate me I swear. So DH bought this one with me in mind. The problem is that it is so light that I have a hard time keeping the front wheels on the ground while mowing. Otherwise it mows good.

DH usually mows with the zero turn, when we get behind we mow with the LS Tractor because it has POWER to get through the grass when it is too long, and I use the John Deere garden tractor with the vacuum system when it all needs a good clean-up.

Options, lots of options. lol
 
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farmerjan

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Directions say to store the batteries in a cool dry place for the winter... not in the mower and not in the charger unless it is not plugged in. Not in a shed that freezes most of the winter....... so in the basement or some place that stays above freezing and not too humid.
I still like it so far... and want to get the riding one next year... hoping they will have a "special" next year to be able to get one, like they had this year. I will overpay the TSC cc if need be to get it on the card if I do not have enough of a credit limit, to get the special financing with no interest... Since they do not carry them in the store in stock, there will not be any "fall clearance sales" on them unfortunately.
 

farmerjan

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Instruction book says optimal storage temps are 32 -100 degrees... and I can't offhand find where I read about the "not allowing it to freeze"... it shortens the life and ability to recharge... You can use them down to like 5* by letting the machine warm up for approx a minute as the battery and motor, start slow and warm up to normal operating speed... Yeah, think snow blower.... ...
 

farmerjan

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I find the mower to be as heavy as a gas mower... the batteries weigh quite a bit in place of the "engine"... 4-5 lbs each I guess....
The self propelled only works in forward, so up and down ditches will be as much a challenge I guess. I don't know about sideways... You ought to go to someplace like TSC or Lowes or somewhere and see if they have any on display and try pushing them around a bit.
The nice thing is the handle folds all the way over so it can be stored against a wall or something, vertically so not taking up alot of floor space... and not stick out... plus no worries of gas or oil or something leaking out either.

They are not cheap... but I feel spending the extra $100 for the self propelled one was really worth it. Plus, get the one that has the battery and charger included. They are expensive and bought as a package saves about $50-100 on separate.

Mine was around $700 ...would have to look up the ticket.... including the mower, small grass catcher, 2 batteries and charger... package deal.... and the extended 2 yr warranty... good after the normal warranty expires.... that was over $150... plus tax and all that stuff. The NON-self propelled one was about $100 cheaper.... It is fully assembled...except to fit the handle into the slots and be careful of the cable... the instructions are very good and easy to understand.... unfold handle, charge the batteries... read the directions, and go. Mine also came with an extra blade that is supposed to be for taller/thicker grass, and it is angled a little different, to be able to throw it out the side discharge better... Mine is 60V... with 2 batteries that are 4 amp maybe... there is one that is a single battery, 60V that is 5.5 amp... the 60V series will take different amps... the amps is "running time"... I have to read the booklet I got often, to make sure I understand it... It runs off one battery at a time so you can run it on one battery if the other is charging, if need be.
 

Mini Horses

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I love anything "non pull" to start!! :clap my generator is push button start -- and you can get gas tillers with battery start. That's easier than the 3pt one on my tractor but, once connected, tractor till is fantastic! 🤣🤣. Choose your poison?
 
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