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#1
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
Hi,
Our Countax 800 is giving up the ghost after 10 years of service. It worked well (when it worked, but was very finicky) but was never really a big enough tractor for our needs. We have about 12k m2 of lawn, with lots of beds and specimen trees to go around; the Countax with it's small box, that usually doesn't fill up, can take 4 hours for a cut during spring. I'm hoping for some advice on a bigger diesel machine, hopefully I'll be able to pick one up used. Requirements a - diesel - large grass box (500 l - ish) - rear central collection with large passage (must work on wet grass) - would prefer high lift collector, but must be hydraulic - cutting deck probably not to exceed 140 cm, 122 minimum - aluminium deck Examples I know that would fit the bill are Iseki SXG 19, or Kubota G23. There are probably some zero turning radius (Kubota GZD 21 IIRC) that would work. (Because of fast growth and uneven ground helicoidal is out.) Any opinions on Iseki vs Kubota? How about Gianni Ferrari? Any other brands I should look for, that might show up on the used market? Thanks, -E |
#2
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Hi i cant comment on the two you suggested but if its any help at all , i can say that the Kubota diesel engines are very simple and , very tough litte engines which are long lasting and easy to maintain , so purely for the reputation of the engine i would be swayed towards the Kubota
Ryan Quote:
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#3
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
On Tuesday, 21 August 2012 12:31:24 UTC+1, ryncharlton wrote:
Hi i cant comment on the two you suggested but if its any help at all , i can say that the Kubota diesel engines are very simple and , very tough litte engines which are long lasting and easy to maintain , so purely for the reputation of the engine i would be swayed towards the Kubota Ryan 'Emery Davis[_4_ Wrote: ;966510']Hi, Our Countax 800 is giving up the ghost after 10 years of service. It worked well (when it worked, but was very finicky) but was never really a big enough tractor for our needs. We have about 12k m2 of lawn, with lots of beds and specimen trees to go around; the Countax with it's small box, that usually doesn't fill up, can take 4 hours for a cut during spring. I'm hoping for some advice on a bigger diesel machine, hopefully I'll be able to pick one up used. Requirements a - diesel - large grass box (500 l - ish) - rear central collection with large passage (must work on wet grass) - would prefer high lift collector, but must be hydraulic - cutting deck probably not to exceed 140 cm, 122 minimum - aluminium deck Examples I know that would fit the bill are Iseki SXG 19, or Kubota G23. There are probably some zero turning radius (Kubota GZD 21 IIRC) that would work. (Because of fast growth and uneven ground helicoidal is out.) Any opinions on Iseki vs Kubota? How about Gianni Ferrari? Any other brands I should look for, that might show up on the used market? -E ryncharlton My experience at work was with general purpose compact tractors and I can second the recommendation for Kubota, their little diesels are great, in about 15 years I never knew any engine trouble, just oil to change and oil and fuel filters to change. Our useage ran into thousands of hours. Rod |
#4
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
On 08/21/2012 07:21 PM, Rod wrote:
On Tuesday, 21 August 2012 12:31:24 UTC+1, ryncharlton wrote: Hi i cant comment on the two you suggested but if its any help at all , i can say that the Kubota diesel engines are very simple and , very tough litte engines which are long lasting and easy to maintain , so purely for the reputation of the engine i would be swayed towards the Kubota Ryan [snip] My experience at work was with general purpose compact tractors and I can second the recommendation for Kubota, their little diesels are great, in about 15 years I never knew any engine trouble, just oil to change and oil and fuel filters to change. Our useage ran into thousands of hours. Rod Thanks guys. Yes, Kubota engines are good kit and very good on fuel as well. We have a little Kubota micro with a 21hp engine, it has been very solid. Not well adapted to lawns but good for orchard work and cleaning up fields. The Iseki engines are also well regarded, at least around here. Lifetime of a good mower is reported to be in excess of 5k hours. One thing I don't really understand is the trade off between horse power and displacement. For example the sxg19 and g21 are both 21 hp, but the Kubota has a displacement of around 700cc whereas the Iseki is around 1000 cc. The Iseki guy was saying that the larger engine is better, but even looking at it naively I'd think the smaller would be better on fuel. And of course it's far more complicated than that... But why would it be necessarily better to have a larger displacement? -E |
#5
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
"Emery Davis" wrote in message ... On 08/21/2012 07:21 PM, Rod wrote: On Tuesday, 21 August 2012 12:31:24 UTC+1, ryncharlton wrote: Hi i cant comment on the two you suggested but if its any help at all , i can say that the Kubota diesel engines are very simple and , very tough litte engines which are long lasting and easy to maintain , so purely for the reputation of the engine i would be swayed towards the Kubota Ryan [snip] My experience at work was with general purpose compact tractors and I can second the recommendation for Kubota, their little diesels are great, in about 15 years I never knew any engine trouble, just oil to change and oil and fuel filters to change. Our useage ran into thousands of hours. Rod Thanks guys. Yes, Kubota engines are good kit and very good on fuel as well. We have a little Kubota micro with a 21hp engine, it has been very solid. Not well adapted to lawns but good for orchard work and cleaning up fields. The Iseki engines are also well regarded, at least around here. Lifetime of a good mower is reported to be in excess of 5k hours. One thing I don't really understand is the trade off between horse power and displacement. For example the sxg19 and g21 are both 21 hp, but the Kubota has a displacement of around 700cc whereas the Iseki is around 1000 cc. The Iseki guy was saying that the larger engine is better, but even looking at it naively I'd think the smaller would be better on fuel. And of course it's far more complicated than that... But why would it be necessarily better to have a larger displacement? -E I would have thought the larger engine would not be working as hard to do the same work, -- Charlie, Gardening in Cornwall Holders of National Collections of Clematis viticella and Lapageria rosea cvs http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk |
#6
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
On 08/23/2012 07:08 PM, Martin wrote:
On Thu, 23 Aug 2012 17:44:53 +0200, Emery Davis wrote: On 08/21/2012 07:21 PM, Rod wrote: On Tuesday, 21 August 2012 12:31:24 UTC+1, ryncharlton wrote: Hi i cant comment on the two you suggested but if its any help at all , i can say that the Kubota diesel engines are very simple and , very tough litte engines which are long lasting and easy to maintain , so purely for the reputation of the engine i would be swayed towards the Kubota Ryan [snip] My experience at work was with general purpose compact tractors and I can second the recommendation for Kubota, their little diesels are great, in about 15 years I never knew any engine trouble, just oil to change and oil and fuel filters to change. Our useage ran into thousands of hours. Rod Thanks guys. Yes, Kubota engines are good kit and very good on fuel as well. We have a little Kubota micro with a 21hp engine, it has been very solid. Not well adapted to lawns but good for orchard work and cleaning up fields. The Iseki engines are also well regarded, at least around here. Lifetime of a good mower is reported to be in excess of 5k hours. One thing I don't really understand is the trade off between horse power and displacement. For example the sxg19 and g21 are both 21 hp, but the Kubota has a displacement of around 700cc whereas the Iseki is around 1000 cc. The Iseki guy was saying that the larger engine is better, but even looking at it naively I'd think the smaller would be better on fuel. And of course it's far more complicated than that... But why would it be necessarily better to have a larger displacement? Slower revving, less wear? Yes, that could be it. The Isekis do seem to be somewhat quieter also. |
#7
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
On Thu, 23 Aug 2012 19:08:21 +0200, Martin wrote:
Slower revving, less wear? Maybe more torque from the larger capcity engine as well. Sheer BHP isn't the complete picture. -- Cheers Dave. |
#8
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large-ish lawn tractor advice
On 08/24/2012 02:05 AM, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Thu, 23 Aug 2012 19:08:21 +0200, Martin wrote: Slower revving, less wear? Maybe more torque from the larger capcity engine as well. Sheer BHP isn't the complete picture. Reviving this to thank you all for the help. Your suggestions were right on re engine size. I demoed an Iseki sxg19 (2008, 600h) and a Kubota G21 (2003, 1500h) last Saturday, from different local dealers. Both have different advantages: the Kubota was more compact and a bit more maneuverable, it has electric assist steering where the Iseki has hydraulic steering. The Iseki mows at a lower rev and is quieter, but above all has a larger grass chute, larger box, better hydraulics, and much heavier construction: e.g. the front axle is cast iron like an agri tractor, the central "bridge" and rods are much thicker. This adds about 100 kg of weight over the Kubota but having broken the Countax multiple times I'm willing to live with that. The Kubota fellow even explained that another client had broken one on a curb, not exactly a point in his favour! A couple of other things I preferred about the Iseki were higher clearance, 2 cutting blades (vs 3), better deck design -- the Kubota requires you to get off the tractor when emptying and pull a lever that clears the deck of grass -- and much harder to clog. Also a better guarantee, through 2013 as opposed to 3 months. Neither had an aluminium deck, the sxg19 is 8 mm steel, the Kubota a little thinner but still very heavy. (The older Kubota had a little rust on the inside of the deck, while the Iseki was still clean). So, I take delivery of the Iseki on Saturday next, and although the Countax has faithfully served to 10 years I will be glad to see its back. Got a pretty decent trade in for it considering condition though. Thanks again. |
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