Originally Posted by MolaKule
Originally Posted by ragtoplvr
Grass contains abrasive particles, some grasses have more. Silica is common in the structure. Blades are heat treated for longer wear. I suspect yours were not heat treated.
My riding mower mulching blades only have the cutting edge heat treated and they will wear thru at the lift portion. Have to be careful sharping to not over heat and change the heat treat.
Rod
Apparently Florida soil is very sandy and I suspect the blades are getting sandblasted?:
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1993-12-03-9312010365-story.html
Yep, sand/dirt is what wears blades out.
Mower blades are carbon steel and the entire blade is heat treated then tempered to a rockwell hardness of 40-C to 45-C so that it is not brittle.
Originally Posted by Eddie
Three inch setting is a low setting here in FL. 3.5 to 4 inch is a more standard setting. I suspect that sand is causing the problem and with unhardened blades I can understand the problem. Ed
Unless you have Bermuda, raise your mowing height.
Originally Posted by ragtoplvr
Grass contains abrasive particles, some grasses have more. Silica is common in the structure. Blades are heat treated for longer wear. I suspect yours were not heat treated.
My riding mower mulching blades only have the cutting edge heat treated and they will wear thru at the lift portion. Have to be careful sharping to not over heat and change the heat treat.
Rod
Apparently Florida soil is very sandy and I suspect the blades are getting sandblasted?:
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1993-12-03-9312010365-story.html
Yep, sand/dirt is what wears blades out.
Mower blades are carbon steel and the entire blade is heat treated then tempered to a rockwell hardness of 40-C to 45-C so that it is not brittle.
Originally Posted by Eddie
Three inch setting is a low setting here in FL. 3.5 to 4 inch is a more standard setting. I suspect that sand is causing the problem and with unhardened blades I can understand the problem. Ed
Unless you have Bermuda, raise your mowing height.