Belt material/quality IS important on most mowers. Depending on the mower make/model the belt 'route' can place a lot of stress on a belt owing to the angles the belt is subjected to.
The belt route on most Land Pride mowers is not too convoluted but still has a number of 90° and 180° bends.
Both sides of the belt (V side and flat side) are subject to stresses. The belt is bending one direction first and then the other way second, so the core material needs to be robust.
The other thing that can adversely affect belt life is belt tension. Too 'tight' (unless) extreme is not usually the culprit. A belt that is too LOOSE will slip and rapidly build up heat. Heat is 'death' to a V-Belt regardless the construction, though cheap rubber belts will be the first to succumb.
Bottom Line: Yes, the better quality belts (Kevlar and the like) will serve you better than lesser belts. I know they are expensive....but how many times do you want to replace a belt....when you could be mowing.
The belt route on most Land Pride mowers is not too convoluted but still has a number of 90° and 180° bends.
Both sides of the belt (V side and flat side) are subject to stresses. The belt is bending one direction first and then the other way second, so the core material needs to be robust.
The other thing that can adversely affect belt life is belt tension. Too 'tight' (unless) extreme is not usually the culprit. A belt that is too LOOSE will slip and rapidly build up heat. Heat is 'death' to a V-Belt regardless the construction, though cheap rubber belts will be the first to succumb.
Bottom Line: Yes, the better quality belts (Kevlar and the like) will serve you better than lesser belts. I know they are expensive....but how many times do you want to replace a belt....when you could be mowing.