Mowing season has begin

My Craftsman is kind of the Ship of Theseus at this point. Every blade, mandrel, pulley and spring on the deck has been replaced, as has the drive idler pulley, the chute shroud, the transaxle, fuel pump, intake push rod, crank seal and sump gasket. Amazingly, it still has the original drive belt. The replacement transmission is getting really noisy and hard to shift so when I replace it I’ll probably just go ahead and install a new drive belt. I have a $50 Craigslist replacement transaxle just waiting to go.
Sounds like my 4 yr old " Toy Built" rider. A few different problems though. Already installed 2 starters, at least a dozen spindles, deck pulleys 2X, deck drive belt 2X a season, and about 6 sets of blades. Transaxle has been crying for 2 years now. Picked up a new one on Flea Bay for pretty cheap. So far, so good on the Briggs & Scrapem engine though. The machine is a piece of junk. I'll get around to changing the transaxle one of these days.
 
New oil/filter when put away. T6 5w40. Napa fiter.
Battery charged monthly in the basement.
Put a fresh sharp set of blades on.
Greased the spindles and front wheels. I think there's another zerk on the steering.
Cut the grass at 2 3/4" to clean debris.
Just hit 200 hrs.
Home Depot Deere. 17hp.

The last zerk is dead center on the bottom of the front axle, just above the front draft arm for the deck. Don't forget it, the axle bushings take quite a beating. When you say spindles, I assume you meant the steering spindles and not deck spindles so make sure and do the deck spindles too.
 
The last zerk is dead center on the bottom of the front axle, just above the front draft arm for the deck. Don't forget it, the axle bushings take quite a beating. When you say spindles, I assume you meant the steering spindles and not deck spindles so make sure and do the deck spindles too.
I have two on the deck/blade spindles, two on front tire shafts, two on the steering pins. I'll look for the one I'm missing unless you have a diagram.
Thanks
 
I have two on the deck/blade spindles, two on front tire shafts, two on the steering pins. I'll look for the one I'm missing unless you have a diagram.
Thanks
4405.webp

You're after #4 on the diagram. The zerk faces down towards the ground, dead center where the axle pivots.
 
Sounds like my 4 yr old " Toy Built" rider. A few different problems though. Already installed 2 starters, at least a dozen spindles, deck pulleys 2X, deck drive belt 2X a season, and about 6 sets of blades. Transaxle has been crying for 2 years now. Picked up a new one on Flea Bay for pretty cheap. So far, so good on the Briggs & Scrapem engine though. The machine is a piece of junk. I'll get around to changing the transaxle one of these days.
Meanwile I have an eleven year old John Deere D140 with 340 hours on it. I've gone through two batteries but the belts, blades and spindles are all original. Go figure.
 
Sounds like my 4 yr old " Toy Built" rider. A few different problems though. Already installed 2 starters, at least a dozen spindles, deck pulleys 2X, deck drive belt 2X a season, and about 6 sets of blades. Transaxle has been crying for 2 years now. Picked up a new one on Flea Bay for pretty cheap. So far, so good on the Briggs & Scrapem engine though. The machine is a piece of junk. I'll get around to changing the transaxle one of these days.
The blades and spindles are all my fault for running over stuff I shouldn't have. All the rest is normal wear. It’s outlasted two hour meters but my best guess is that it’s over 700 hours now. I think the average homeowner who has to pay someone for repairs would have scrapped it in 2020 when the original transaxle went, or in 2022 when the sump gasket was leaking so badly it was dripping onto the muffler and smoking.
 
Meanwile I have an eleven year old John Deere D140 with 340 hours on it. I've gone through two batteries but the belts, blades and spindles are all original. Go figure.
The blades and spindles are all my fault for running over stuff I shouldn't have. All the rest is normal wear. It’s outlasted two hour meters but my best guess is that it’s over 700 hours now. I think the average homeowner who has to pay someone for repairs would have scrapped it in 2020 when the original transaxle went, or in 2022 when the sump gasket was leaking so badly it was dripping onto the muffler and smoking.
My " Toy Built" rider doesn't have an hour meter, but I figure it has around 200 on it. It PROUDLY displays " Made in America",, with at least 3 of those stickers plastered on it. Meanwhile, all the original parts I've replaced on it were stamped " Made In China" .. I did find some spindles with zerk fittings. They last a bit longer,,but are made in China also. Also found out that Murray makes Troy Built, when I was looking for parts. Murray parts are made in China. They just don't make riders like they use to. Before my Grandmother passed, she was still running a 30yr old Craftsman rider. I use to maintain it for her. Just needed belts, batteries, and blade sharpening every now and again. Seasonal oil changes with plugs & air filter every 2 seasons. She was cutting 3 acres with it. I'm cutting a measly 3/4 acre. Stay away from Troy Built.
 
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5 acres to mow every week. I'm thinking about just spraying grass killer on it all and having a dirt yard 😤. My zero turns electric clutch is slipping and I had to mow it all on a Deere rider. This week the wife mowed so I had it pretty easy and worked on the garden.
 
My " Toy Built" rider doesn't have an hour meter, but I figure it has around 200 on it. It PROUDLY displays " Made in America",, with at least 3 of those stickers plastered on it. Meanwhile, all the original parts I've replaced on it were stamped " Made In China" .. I did find some spindles with zerk fittings. They last a bit longer,,but are made in China also. Also found out that Murray makes Troy Built, when I was looking for parts. Murray parts are made in China. They just don't make riders like they use to. Before my Grandmother passed, she was still running a 30yr old Craftsman rider. I use to maintain it for her. Just needed belts, batteries, and blade sharpening every now and again. Seasonal oil changes with plugs & air filter every 2 seasons. She was cutting 3 acres with it. I'm cutting a measly 3/4 acre. Stay away from Troy Built.
The next time I buy spindles I'm going to take the seals off the bearings so they can actually get grease in them. I never understood having grease fittings with sealed bearings.
 
Scalped my Bermuda last week when it dried out from a big rain. 12th year for the HRX and she never disappoints. Once gas was flowing, second pull brought her to life again. Won't have to mow again for a couple weeks til grass get to 2". That will give me time to clean off all the dead grass dust/dirt and change the air filter. Alway do my oil change, drivetrain lube, cables, sharpen blades and all other maintenance at the end of the season so I can start fresh when the yard gets that green haze. Love springtime.
 
5 acres to mow every week. I'm thinking about just spraying grass killer on it all and having a dirt yard 😤. My zero turns electric clutch is slipping and I had to mow it all on a Deere rider. This week the wife mowed so I had it pretty easy and worked on the garden.
Oof !! 5 acres is a full time job. I would turn a few acres into dirt too. Sorry to hear about the clutch, but at least you had the rider to cut it. You're lucky that the wife mowed it. My wife won't even WALK on grass, let alone cut it. She says " ILL, yuck !! With all the bugs, ticks, deer droppings,,,not me !! " Typical city girl from The Bronx. Grew up on asphalt and concrete. I grew up on the same, but the grass gotta get cut. I get back at her though. Make her do all the windows, clean the hardwood floors, do all the food shopping, etc. -)
 
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Reading this post and all you guys replacing spindles and starters and all that is no fun. I used to do that years ago.

I've been buying gently used, low hour zero turn mowers, run them for a few years problem free, and then sell it for about what I paid for it. Rince, wash, and repeat. Problem free mowing sure beats having to rebuild decks and replace parts all the time.

My current mower, same as my last mower, is a Toro zero turn. Last one I bought for $1650, ran it for three years, zero problems, just put gas in it, sold it for $2000 last year. Bought a like new one for $1700, will run it for a few years, and sell it. Rince, wash, repeat.

Zero net dollar mowers, with no issues. Its the way to go. Let someone else take the deprecation hit and then buy a low hour unit with under 40 hours (I see them all day long) And then let someone else take the maintenance hit once it gets up there in hours.
 
Your @football revolving ZTR practice has merit. I was looking at new prices of ZTRs and got a little gunshy. A new deck, blades, belt, and rear wheels/tires would breathe life into this machine of mine and get me on average another 4 years. The trade on it at the dealer is $500, which is 60 more than the cost of a new deck. Or I shell out stupid money for something newer. Even the used professional models out there are $$ around here.
 
Reading this post and all you guys replacing spindles and starters and all that is no fun. I used to do that years ago.

I've been buying gently used, low hour zero turn mowers, run them for a few years problem free, and then sell it for about what I paid for it. Rince, wash, and repeat. Problem free mowing sure beats having to rebuild decks and replace parts all the time.

My current mower, same as my last mower, is a Toro zero turn. Last one I bought for $1650, ran it for three years, zero problems, just put gas in it, sold it for $2000 last year. Bought a like new one for $1700, will run it for a few years, and sell it. Rince, wash, repeat.

Zero net dollar mowers, with no issues. Its the way to go. Let someone else take the deprecation hit and then buy a low hour unit with under 40 hours (I see them all day long) And then let someone else take the maintenance hit once it gets up there in hours.
I did the same before I retired. If my mower broke down I gave it away free and bought another one. Unfortunately today's prices for new and used exceed my ability to afford that lifestyle. I didn't plan for 4x price increases on everything.
 
I did the same before I retired. If my mower broke down I gave it away free and bought another one. Unfortunately today's prices for new and used exceed my ability to afford that lifestyle. I didn't plan for 4x price increases on everything.
I agree. Prices are ridiculous. No way would I find a slightly used zero turn in New York for $1650. The hundreds of landscapers around here would have already scooped them up. They have the inside info on stuff like that. I'll keep fixing my " Toy Built" rider. Parts are cheap, since their all made in China anyway. It's only 4 yrs old with 200hrs. When the Briggs and Scrapem engine blows, then I'll upgrade.
 
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Got a Snapper Ninja 21" self-propelled that's about 20 years old. Just changed the oil in it with some stellar Amazon Basic 0w40, or whatever they label it. Turn the mower upside down and drain it out the filler neck in to a plastic tub.

Have only replaced the primer bulb. Changed blades on it years ago just to see if it improved the cut of some really heavy grass.

Haven't mowed yet. Those dandelions are gettin pretty tall, though.
 
I agree. Prices are ridiculous. No way would I find a slightly used zero turn in New York for $1650. The hundreds of landscapers around here would have already scooped them up. They have the inside info on stuff like that. I'll keep fixing my " Toy Built" rider. Parts are cheap, since their all made in China anyway. It's only 4 yrs old with 200hrs. When the Briggs and Scrapem engine blows, then I'll upgrade.
When both my mowers are down I borrow a 30 or 40 year old rider from a friend and it still runs like new. I can't remember the brand but I would love to have one just like it. It has gears not the automatic transmissions like today.
 
Yesterday was my 3rd mow here in my part of PA, right along the MD border. Mowed all 1/2+ acre with the Honda self-propelled push as the Cub 46" rider is cutting so un-even. Have had constant issues with it doing that. Tired of tinkering with it. Probably gonna slap a for sale sign on it and pick up a small zero-turn...
 
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