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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Cub with belly mower - any good?

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ags1

07-11-2005 06:29:53




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I am considering buying a cub with a belly mower to cut about 3-4 acres of grass and roadway cover (mostly trimmed weeds/crabgrass). I understand these tractors are about 10 HP, at this low HP are they any good for my purpose and are they generally reliable if maintained?




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Leland

07-11-2005 23:40:26




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
Buy your self a dixie chopper you will be down 5x faster those cubs are slow and a little under powered spent many a day mowing with one never again .



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Steve in Mo

07-11-2005 13:15:02




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
Be sure to take into consideration the lay of your land, hills etc. I have a Cub that I love but if I had it to do again I would be sure to get a low boy. The regular cubs are very tippy even with wheel weights. Still a great machine just be careful, get wheel weights front and back and move the wheels out if you can. Just my thoughts.



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TimV

07-11-2005 11:25:44




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
Ags1: Mowing and cultivating were the two main jobs the Cub was designed to do, and with over 100,000 of them sold, you're in very good company using a Cub to mow with. I mow about an acre and a half with mine, equipped with a 5-foot belly mower. Provided you don't let the grass grow into a hayfield, it will mow just fine in second gear. Bear in mind that the 10 hp rating on the Cub is DRAWBAR horsepower--what's actually availible to use pulling an implement. Most lawn and garden tractors today are rated (and often charitably rated at that...) using CRANKSHAFT horsepower, which doesn't take into account the power wasted in moving the tractor or driving any accessories. If by chance you run into a deal on a Farmall A, Super A, Allis B or C, or similar tractor these will also work well, but the Cub is an excellent mowing tractor in its own right.

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Mike M

07-11-2005 09:38:20




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
Do yourself a favor --- skip over that cub and jump up to the next size bigger a model A you will be alot happier with the extra power.Don't over look the Case VAC and Allis Chalmers B,C models these work good with belly mowers as well.
And may even sell cheaper.



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Buzzman72

07-11-2005 07:46:27




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
A lot of the answer to your question is, "it depends..." As in, it depends on the condition of the Cub (assuming you ARE talking about a regular Cub and not a Cadet), it depends on the mower, and it depends on what you're cutting.

When I was a teenager, Dad had a Cub that he did custom mowing with. With a Woods 42C belly mower, that Cub would cut just about anything you could get under it...of course, the 2450 rpm governor off a power unit was a big help, as was the drilled-out carb jet. We also used a Mott Hammerknife belly mower for a time, and it was great on straight lawns...as was the Woods 59. And the Cub-22 sickle mower managed to do a wonderful job on the stuff where it was needed, especially when Dad had a contract with the town mowing street and alley rights-of-ways.

But if you expect the Woods 59 (or the IH 5-foot belly mower) to do a bush-hog type of job, you'll be disappointed because the mower simply pulls too hard to effectively cut the heavy stuff (and it uses "lawn-mower" blades, instead of the heavy swinging-type blades that the Woods 42C has). But conversely, with the Woods 42C, as long as you keep the blades fairly sharp and don't mow any stumps or rockpiles, you can still get a lawn-quality job from it as well.

I spent a lot of hours of seat time on that Cub, sometimes six days a week when the weather allowed, so if the Cub is in good mechanical shape and you have the right belly mower for the type of mowing you intend to do, I think you'll be quite pleased with its performance.

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ags1

07-11-2005 08:18:01




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to Buzzman72, 07-11-2005 07:46:27  
Which is better: belly mover or flail mower?



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Buzzman72

07-11-2005 19:46:31




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 08:18:01  
The Mott Hammerknife mower was a belly-mount flail mower. As I said, it does a really good job on a lawn...probably better than the Woods 59 or the International 3-blade 5-foot belly mower.

Just remember that the Cub doesn't have a standardized 540-rpm PTO...the Cub PTO runs at engine speed, usually 1800 rpm. So the Cub PTO would overspeed a regular rear-mount flail mower...UNLESS you can find the gear-reduction unit that IH also sold for the Cub--which, BTW, also reverses the direction of PTO rotation to correspond with the standard used by the rest of the ag world.

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RustyFarmall

07-11-2005 07:00:30




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
The cub will be just fine, will do a fine job of mowing and properly maintained will be almost bullet proof. The 10 horsepower of the cub will easily outwork any newer 10 horse lawn tractor.



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CB in central NY

07-11-2005 06:39:48




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 Re: Cub with belly mower - any good? in reply to ags1, 07-11-2005 06:29:53  
I have a Cub Cadet made by IH in 1965, model 122. Runs like a champ with regular maintenance. It"s a 12 HP, not 10 (Kohler engine). I don"t know about the new Cubs.



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