How does a flail mower fair against stumps and rocks?Caroni 5' Flail Mower . . and don't look back . . better cut, I use mine for finish cutting and light brush hogging up to 1" - 1 1/2 " . . a little more maintenance but worth it. Uses considerably less HP than a rotary cutter . . your L3800 will thank you for it . .
http://www.agrisupply.com/caroni-flail-mower/p/30837/
How does a flail mower fair against stumps and rocks?
That's no joke either. Flail mowers and rocks don't mix well.More numerous and smaller sparks and shrapnel flying up at you...
A lot of work?I like my flail but it's a lot of work to keep it cutting good. Maybe I need different blades but I'm limited to what will work because my rotor is reversible.
What D2cat said.Bulldog, you mention " Flail mowers and rocks don't mix well."
And Diydave says, "More numerous and smaller sparks and shrapnel flying up at you."
I don't know of any mower that does very well with rocks.
A flair mower is more forgiving because it has several cutting edges, smaller in size and less momentum then a mower slinging the blades horizontal to the ground.
The flail mower throws the cuttings out the back. Much less change of any object being thrown by the blades. That's why flail mower are used by city, county, state on roadsides.
If you have too many rocks to safely mow, choices seem to be remove rocks, use area for grazing, make a rock garden!
Hmm, can't imagine why . . I sharpen my blades once a year and mig weld up the shackles that are excessively worn . . . . I maintain about 10 acres with it.I like my flail but it's a lot of work to keep it cutting good. Maybe I need different blades but I'm limited to what will work because my rotor is reversible.