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#1
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LT decks
I have a "newbie" question, although I have had a Cub for about 10 years.
The LT series had a few different deck sizes. Is the deck the ONLY difference between the machines? I ask because I want to go up a tire size, both front and rear to give a little bit more clearance and go to a more aggressive tread. I have room in the front since there is no fender and plenty or room in the rear. But I can see that if I increase the size it will hit the deck. I have the LT1050. I really don't want to buy a new machine quite yet, but after 10 years I think that it could be a little more useful if I could raise the ground clearance. As it is, the 50" deck is tucked quite nicely under the unit. I'm not opposed to pulling a self-powered mower behind if I have to, but I am thinking that a different deck configuration would be easier and cheaper to accomplish.... Any thoughts? |
#2
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How does gaining ground clearance make the machine more useful? It's not heavy enough for ground engaging equipment...... so?
What do you mean when you ask: Quote:
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#3
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Quote:
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OP, can I ask just how much bigger rear tires you are planning on going that would prohibit the deck from being installed? But more importantly than that...why? Are you having traction issues? Doing a lot of offroading? Just trying to get some info on this
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-Ryan
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#4
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Are you mowing rough terrain and trying to gain clearance to mow over it?
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Brian April 1979 1200 Quietline 44A deck 1988 1211 customized into a 1288 with a K301AQS 38C deck and a 1864 54” deck . Snow blades 42" and 54" . Brinly disk, brinly plow a cultivator and a $5 brinly yard rake! |
#5
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Quote:
When sitting on a flat surface, the highest setting is less than 3" because of that. With larger wheels the entire adjustment could be used giving more clearance in rough areas and still be able to lower the deck for smooth cuts. To answer some of the other responders: Off-roading....NO Ground-engaging equipment...NO And I am talking about LT machines. I'm curious why when I asked about deck size being the only difference you didn't get that. It wasn't a trick question. Thanks for all of your answers. I'll ask the dealer. |
#6
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[QUOTE=Moark Willy;303695]
Quote:
Second, I think we were all just curious why you're wanting to put bigger tires (so big they won't fit with the deck on) on your machine if all you're doing is mowing. Looks perhaps?
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-Ryan
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#7
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The engines were different too. Looks like deck size went up with HP. LTs are toward the bottom of the page.
http://www.tractordata.com/lawn-trac...-tractors.html
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Travis 1993 Cub Cadet 2064 1988 Cub Cadet 2072 1980 IH Cub Cadet 782 w/CH20 1966 IH Cub Cadet 102 w/K301 1961 IH Cub Cadet O 1967 IH Cub Cadet 102 & 122 JD 2155 w/ 175 loader |
#8
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Larger tires create more problems.... first you will have to find rims that fit, unless your just talking about taller tires. Then you have to be sure they will fit in the fenders. You already said they will hit the deck. Your going to lose torque and it will be harder to control at slow speeds...... Wasting your time IMHO. Quote:
Yeah.... as if they will know, or recommend it. They're just going to try and upsell you on a bigger tractor. If you want bigger and better...... sell that one and buy an older machine. A nice 1861/2/3/4 will be 1000X better. I'm sure you could get enough out of that one to get an 18XX. |
#9
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I would do what others have said get rid of the lt and get an older gt . I have a 1211 with a 38c deck hyd lift . I haven't ever measured for sure , but it has a lot higher lift than my 1200. I'd say it probably has 6" of clearance all the way up. If not dang close. Another thing is that a lt isn't gonna take much abuse on rough terrain. Frames, alxes. Transmission,spindles aren't near as heavy built as on older gt machines.
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Brian April 1979 1200 Quietline 44A deck 1988 1211 customized into a 1288 with a K301AQS 38C deck and a 1864 54” deck . Snow blades 42" and 54" . Brinly disk, brinly plow a cultivator and a $5 brinly yard rake! |
#10
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I'll just ignore the comments I don't agree with....as many of you do.
But I am sure ther is someone out there with a LT that has a smaller deck than the 50". So here are my assumptions. The blades are smaller on those decks so the deck is smaller. Obviously the width is less...hence the smaller deck. Is the depth or the deck narrower as well...front to back? Now here are the IF's... If the deck is narrower then perhaps it would allow for larger diameter wheel. This of course would be affected if the mounting for this deck differs from the larger one, but it appears that the mount is the same for all of the LT series. Again, this is a determination that I made from diagrams in the manual. At the rear, wheel clearance to the deck is tight with the original deck. That is the real issue. A narrower deck would eliminate these problems. Again, thanks to you who have been helpful. You know who you are. I am not trying to be argumentative, but when I ask the time I don't need to know how to build a clock. |
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