Well, it kinda depends on whether you get the Korean built 608's, or the Taiwanese built ones. I bought two pair (because I killed two pair) in one year from the same store about 4 months apart, and they looked COMPLETELY different. Not sure how a completely different shoe can have the same model/style number. Second pair took forever to break in and get them to stop making blisters on me. One pair was also a half size smaller than the other, but stretched quicker, so it became a non-issue soon.
Yesterday, I planned on an 'easy' day of running the walk-behind brush mower out back. I use the term "Walk Behind" loosely. It's more like stumble behind and be dragged behind. It acts more like a 400 pound bear that likes to kick my butt as soon as I pull the start cord and bring it to life. It's a devastating beast. ANYTHING that is in front of it and sticks up at least 2.5 inches is going to meet certain destruction. I've knocked 3 inch stumps out of the ground with it, and chopped up seasoned pine knots. that were hiding under the leaf mat. The latter usually comes out the back of the machine in fragments, where they like to embed themselves in the shins of the unsuspecting operator. 1" diameter brush isn't even a challenge, other than pushing it over until the blade hits the first time. 2" muscadine vines can be a little rough, especially if they grab the end of the axle shaft and cause a sudden turn, which will deliver a body blow with the handle bar rivaling that of Mike Tyson. Anything that is behind it (namely the operator) is going to be thrown around like a rag doll, slapped up against trees, dragged through ditches and briars, and generally wishing for a good flail mower to replace it. I weigh 195, and if this mower decides to go a different direction, I just let go of it and wish for the best hoping it stops before disaster happens. The largest difference in this mower (Swisher Predator 24 with 11.5 HP Briggs on it) and a 400 pound bear is that a bear will either get tired or bored and eventually stop hurting you. The mower does NOT get tired, nor does it really care how much it hurts you. Usually. Yesterday, it got tired and quit about 30 minutes after I started cutting. I wasn't even angry, because of that slight hope that I was about to get the green-light for a hammer flail from the missus. As it were, I went back and got it with the LX and some slings hanging from the grapple, and sat it down gently in the shop for a little troubleshooting.
Checked the carb. No, nothing out of the ordinary there. Plenty fuel. (Did anyone have a Carl Childers "Outta Gas" moment just then?) Pulled the cover, checked the flywheel key, not a mark on it, and I didn't figure there would be because it's belt drive. It would crank at WOT, and run about 800 RPM, but sounded like it was back-firing through the carb every second power stroke, and would not idle at all. Hmmm. I pulled the valve cover, and the exhaust valve rocker fell out in my hand when I touched it. I dunno how it was running at all. Set gaps on both valves, it started on the first pull, and bingo, ran like a top. Crap, now I can't ask the missus for the flail. Zero cost in parts (except for a dab of silicone I already had), nothing but labor (and delay of the job) for cost. The Swisher (when new) cost almost as much as flails do now, so I can't just not use it. (That's actually my thinking, not hers). I bought it in 2008 thinking me and two scrapping teen age boys would get the property under control. 15 years later, I had the first major mechanical issue with the mower, which actually turned out to be pretty minor. One of those general maintenance things I never thought about on a 'lawn mower'. This is NOT a lawn mower. Lawn destroyer maybe, mower definitely not.
So what did I do on the Kubota? Carried the Swisher a couple hundred feet back to the shed 'cause I sure as heck wasn't pushing that heavy bugger all the way back to the tool box. I think letting the Kubota watch while I worked on the Swisher may have let the Swisher know its days are numbered. (Or perhaps the days I can use it are.)