Inherited LT160
Model Year: 0
I have an LT160 that was left on my farm as part of the purchase agreement. It had 425 hours when I took ownership of it. When I moved to my 20+ acres, it was the only farm vehicle I had except for my Jeep. It did the duties that my ATV and tractor and ZTR mower do now. I really beat it up pretty good, using it as a bush hog to mow the trails in the woods, dragging a homemade drag, pulling a manure cart up and down some gnarly trails in the woods (and frequently getting stuck), taking the trash down in the utility cart, etc. I even used the lowered deck as a makeshift blade to spread some mulch and dirt. For a while during the winter, I took the deck off and it was used in the snow to pull buckets of water out to the horses when the water pipes froze (a particularly cold winter in Alabama). I've done routine care like battery, belts, blades, oil, filters, etc. I bought the parts to put the guard back on the deck (they had put the mulching plug in it. I've had various minor parts break and replaced them with parts I bought at the JD dealer. A part underneath the deck that was attached to the PTO lever broke and was a difficult fix. After being fixed, the PTO safety switch sometimes doesn't engage, so I rigged it with some washers which has helped. Right now it's attached to our ground-drive manure spreader, and it does a great job pulling it since it only goes 5mph and that's the max speed of the spreader. I've truly misused and abused this already well-used mower. Although it has lots of issues (newest issues are that the hood hinges broke, lights stopped working, and left headlamp lens cover is falling off). It still starts up instantly and does a good job mowing. I'll continue using it until it just falls apart or the engine goes. Since it has withstood the abuse I've given it, I consider it to be fairly reliable. If just used for a residential lawn and well-cared for, it may just last a lifetime.
Pros: Withstands abuse, hydrostatic transmission.
Cons: Very basic features.