Magicman
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
M4900 Utility Special 4WD e/w FEL & 1530 John Deere "Traveling Man"
You seem to, obviously, really dislike Kohler engines here, and group briggs in with them mostly. Based on your post im assuming you were or are a mower dealer, so Id assume you see tons of mowers over the years to back up your claims. I wonder then what you think of Grasshopper? They are the king in my area. All the state crews who maintain right of ways, interstates, etc all run them, all the big time commercial mowing companies here run almost all grasshopper. I know people personally who have smaller mowing operations (4 mowers) who run all grasshopper for years. The thing with grasshopper though is that most all their mowers, if not all of them, sport Kohler and/or Briggs engines. Until your post here, Ive heard nothing but good things about Kohler engines. The local grasshopper dealer here, who is reported to be one of the largest grasshopper dealers in the south east, says the Briggs engines now are perhaps even better than kohler, but he still praises kohler. He has a lot of opposite views that you express here, and he is a well respected dealer here, stands behind and services all he sales etc. I just wonder how two different dealers have such different experiences with Kohler engines. My friend who runs a 4 mower business has run kohler engine grasshoppers for over 20 years, and he has never had any engine trouble with any of them.lawn mowers have been my bread and butter for coming up on 29 years.
Kohler powered equipment keeps me in business
I won't own another mower that has a Kohler. Kawasaki only, or diesel. Preferably diesel.
I still have/use a ZG127S, kohler powered zero turn 54". It's a light duty mower with a heavy built deck. About 400 hours or so on it (I bought it used) and it's done well for me, but I've had to to put 2 starters on it and fix several oil leaks, typical of Kohler (they are known for it). I put a new engine on it when I got it, it developed an oil leak (common kohler problem) and the owner wasn't an oil checker; I don't think they were a checker of anything based on the mower's condition. Runs fine. Noisy (another kohler trait) but plenty of power. Fuel thirsty but that's comparing to the old diesel G1900 that I had (run ALL season on a tank of fuel mowing a little under 1.5 acre).
I'm thinking about buying a new one and thinking about a Z421 with a 54". Love those mowers. Kawasaki powered.
I owned a bad boy and a spartan. The spartan is a spinoff of bad boy, per say. The original builder/designer of bad boy split off of the company he started and went out on his own again (spartan), and there's some "other" stuff going on behind the scene too. I don't live too far from him. He was building mowers in his 2 car garage before bad boy came into the picture. Anyway, spartan is a nicer version of bad boy; also more expensive. They share a lot of traits. The bad boy I owned wouldn't turn NEARLY as good as any kubota, period. Like comparing a 3/4 ton pickup to a Mustang, with the Mustang being the kubota. Bad boy tore up a lot of turf trying to get it to turn. The decks cut awesome (48, 54, and 60 specifically), engines are just engines, with Kohler getting a lot of exposure on bad boy stuff, and again, they keep me in business. Lots of oil leaks and lots of starter failures as of lately; shaft breaks off, bendix just lays between the flywheel & starter, bushings fail in the housings, and a slew of other little things. Valve cover leaks. Drain plugs back out. etc, etc. I don't like them if that's not been made obvious yet. Kawasaki is a better engine all the way around. Smoother, quieter, more refined, rare to see one with a non-user induced failure (lack of maintenance....). Briggs? ehh....about the same as Kohler, spend a little more time in the shop but they are a little quieter. Bad boy decks are VERY heavy built, but they skipped a major step in design, ribbing. The top of the deck is like 1/4 or 5/16" thick I think, but it's 100% flat, and over time it bends and/or cracks. Mostly on the 60" but I've seen 48 and 54 do the same things. Deck lift motors fail occasionally but I think they fixed that now (finally). Wiring issues, finally I think fixed (don't see many anymore). I like them but they've got some work to do in order to compete with Kubota. Similar with Spartan. He's got some more work to do in order to properly compete. Spartan is a good looking mower and real comfortable to operate, they just still have a few quirks similar to bad boy. Fix those? Great mower.
Scag? Nope. I sold them for about 4 years. They rarely paid us for any warranty repairs, with every imaginable excuse in the book as to why. So I quit selling them, period. Maybe things have changed, but that was an internal issue that stuck with me over the years. I was pleased with the mowers just not the company in general.
Hustler ain't a lot better. Hustler is a cheap built mower that gets a lot of advertising exposure, similar to bad boy but not at that level. Don't like them. Not at all.
Yes you are correct and I was aware of this and had just forgot, mostly because I have not been really looking at those higher end models as it is more than I need. Outside of those higher end models though most all the grasshoppers you see are Kohler and Briggs engines. They do not, to my knowledge, have any powered by a Kawasaki engine.Tornado, you said, "The thing with grasshopper though is that most all their mowers, if not all of them, sport Kohler and/or Briggs engines."
Grasshopper has Kubota gas and Kubota diesel engines available in their larger commercial mowers. We've had three Grasshoppers, all of them had Kubota engines.
Why yes there is a right way and a wrong way to place the TP in a traditional TP holder.Are you saying TP is suppose to come off the roll in a particular rotation? I wonder how that opinion is formed? Did folks have serious trouble getting the roll to unwind when started wrong?
Holds true by me.With zero turn mowers, often the brand is more popular the closer to the manufacturing plant, and dealer support.
Fully aware of that. My point, to just cut to the chase is that if Kohler engines were so terrible, there would be A LOT of complaints on grasshopper here, because there are thousands of them here, everyone runs them, almost all of them are running kohler engines, yet nothing but huge positive is heard about them. Engines are not failing. The dealer is not backed up with repairs, the delar in fact praises the kohler engines. Im trying to understand how one person says they have a high rate of failure in many areas, and gives good detailed info on the failures he see's, and couple that to what I hear from folks here who are putting thousands of hours on them without issues. If the kohler engines were suffering all the issues talked about in this thread they would not enjoy the praise they currently have here. Thats my point. I realize popularity doesnt equal superior across the land. It does however mean a huge test bed. My step dad runs grasshopper, my neighbor who owns lots of acreage runs grasshopper, my local county maintenance department its all grasshopper, the state boys doing all the interstate and right of ways its all grasshoppers, my co worker who runs a lawn business its grasshopper for 20 years, another co worker runs a grasshopper just for his personal yard, Most all other mowing outfits here have atleast one grasshopper on the trailer. The majority, id say 90% of all those are running kohler engines. I hear nothing but praise from all fronts. Many of these folks are very mechanically inclined and if the engine was crap they would be quick to say so. This is what im working with. Hope that clears that upI've got an 8hp Briggs and Stratton on a Brave logsplitter that must be 25 years old. I can't wear it out! I have a 12HP Lister Petter diesel I'd like to put on it, but not going to until it quits.
With zero turn mowers, often the brand is more popular the closer to the manufacturing plant, and dealer support. So when someone says one brand is more popular in their area, consider that. Because one is not popular does not necessarily mean it's lower quality.
Each person has to do their due diligence based on THEIR needs, funds, dealer support and their willingness to do any service.
...My mower is the Kubota ZD331 - before Tier IV regulations. Bullet proof commercial mower. Worst thing about it is the deck wheels - maybe. I think it has more to do with my setting them for a 2.5" cut and my wife setting it for 2" without adjusting the wheels. Expensive yes, but it has lasted 10 years so far and still cuts strong...