Hey all, I wanted to share my current improvised pull mower setup and see if anyone has any thoughts about modifying it.
This all started when I purchased a new home with 1.5 acres of lawn. My FIL had an old Craftsman 42" rider that had been sitting unused in a shed since 98. New battery, plug, air and fuel filter, and fuel and it was in wonderful condition. First time out it took me probably 3 hours to mow it all. Off to Craigslist and happen to find 2 almost identical mowers to pull behind the mower to increase the width. Both have the same 22" deck, one's a 5 and the other is a 6hp. Total cost for push mowers = $55.
Used some scrap iron laying around to build an A frame and now I have about 78" of mowing deck that cut my time down to about 1.5 hours give or take.
I'd really love to have them both swing off the left side to avoid the discharge chute and also so I can run my front right tire up along the already cut line and not have to keep looking back to adjust based on the back right mower. I found a video of a gentleman who looks like he's solved the problem and they look like they do really well trailing.
YouTube - mobmower2
He's got quite a few more mowers than I would have but the principle is the same.
This all started when I purchased a new home with 1.5 acres of lawn. My FIL had an old Craftsman 42" rider that had been sitting unused in a shed since 98. New battery, plug, air and fuel filter, and fuel and it was in wonderful condition. First time out it took me probably 3 hours to mow it all. Off to Craigslist and happen to find 2 almost identical mowers to pull behind the mower to increase the width. Both have the same 22" deck, one's a 5 and the other is a 6hp. Total cost for push mowers = $55.
Used some scrap iron laying around to build an A frame and now I have about 78" of mowing deck that cut my time down to about 1.5 hours give or take.


I'd really love to have them both swing off the left side to avoid the discharge chute and also so I can run my front right tire up along the already cut line and not have to keep looking back to adjust based on the back right mower. I found a video of a gentleman who looks like he's solved the problem and they look like they do really well trailing.
YouTube - mobmower2
He's got quite a few more mowers than I would have but the principle is the same.