When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: used tractor brush mowers

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Brush hog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brush_hog

    A bush hog or "brush hog" is a type of rotary mower. Typically these mowers are designed to be towed behind a farm tractor using the three-point hitch and are driven via the power take-off (PTO). It has blades that are not rigidly attached to the drive like a lawnmower blade, but are on hinges so if the blade hits a rock or stump , it bounces ...

  3. Lawn mower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawn_mower

    Mowers mounted on a tractor's three-point hitch may be known as finish mowers used for maintaining lawn, flail mowers used for maintaining rough grass on rough surfaces, or brush mowers used for cutting brush and small trees.

  4. Gravely Tractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravely_Tractor

    Sulkies and steering sulkies were available for walk-behind tractors, as well as an optional solid platform with space for carrying small amounts of cargo (trailers). While it offered walk-behind mowers, brush-cutters and other equipment, by 2014 Gravely no longer produced general-purpose walk-behind tractors. [3]

  5. Worthington Mower Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worthington_Mower_Company

    The Worthington Mower Company, originally called the Shawnee Mower Factory, produced lawn mowers and light-duty tractors in the United States from the early 1920s until around 1959. Founded by Charles Campbell Worthington and run as a family business, in 1945 it was purchased by Jacobsen Manufacturing .

  6. Jacobsen Manufacturing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobsen_Manufacturing

    Logo used for the Jacobsen 4-Acre mower. In 1945 Jacobsen Manufacturing purchased the Worthington Mower Company of East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, known for its gang mowers for golf courses, parks and airfields. [2] In 1949 the new subsidiary began making Model G tractors using Ford tractor components, mostly for use in parks and golf courses. [3]

  7. Mower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mower

    Eicher tractor with a mid-mounted finger-bar mower. Sickle mowers, also called reciprocating mowers, bar mowers, sickle-bar mowers, or finger-bar mowers, have a long (typically six to seven and a half feet) bar on which are mounted fingers with stationary guardplates. In a channel on the bar there is a reciprocating sickle with very sharp ...