P3PPY said:
Well, they gave us $13,300. I’m going to have a conversation with the pastor soon about the different paths to pursue.
1. Smaller footprint lawn and $3k used [EDIT: or $4-5k new??] mower
2. Same footprint lawn and high end fast mower- on the theory that we need to have the lawn done in the least amount of time possible since we don’t have people with a lot of spare time to do it anymore
Not knowing the property, here is what I would honestly probably do.
Used commercial ZT. I won't speak to brands since I haven't kept up with them. When you compare a residential ZT to a commercial, well.... you can't really compare them. Thin steel decks, stamped pulleys, stamped-steel gear boxes sometimes, just junk. A commercial tractor has heavy components, cast iron gear boxes and differentials, beefier versions of the more common engine brands, etc.
Then find yourself a good used riding mower/tractor. Something from the 3 or 4 series John Deere with about a 48" deck. One of my favorites is the JD 322. I have one that the hour meter broke at 2100 hours and that was in the late 90s. I gave it to by brother-in-law and he still uses it to mow his 4 acres. He will have to replace the deck soon as the metal around the bearing housings is cracking, but I would guess he has 3500 hours on it. The tail lights have fallen out, the grill is missing, and the back wheels finally rusted so badly that one fell off. I'm rambling.... my point is, this way you'll have a backup, and you'll have a tractor with some utility for things. If one breaks a belt, just keep going with the other one. If you have parishioners who volunteer to mow like our church does, just have them bring their teenager along to run the other mower and get done in way less time.
Newer residential stuff is honestly good for about 300-500 hours before they're just a wasted lump. A true agricultural or professional piece with good maintenance might go for 4000 hours without breaking a sweat. Dad and I restore old tractors and we have about a dozen tractors from the 30s to the 70s. We have a Ford 8N with about 3500 hours that so far has needed exactly one repair. The points got crusty, so he scraped them with a pocket knife and it fixed it. It gets used in the summers with a brushhog and the winters it gets a 6' PTO snow blower.
I could tell you all kinds of stories, but you are mowing 8 acres. Go pro. Don't skimp. And just like many things, I would rather have an older mower with the same hours compared to a newer mower. Newer stuff has found ways of making things proprietary, cheap, light, and not like they used to. Having worked at HD and sold much of the consumer/residential stuff, I can tell you that many of those riding mowers you see chained up out front sometimes get loaded into the bed of a truck by two beefy guys just lifting them in. They usually come back after a couple weeks when the deck belt pulley has bent so badly that it won't hold the belt anymore. Contrast that with my 1976 Bolens, or my SWMBOs 1980s Wheel Horse/Toro, they have massive cast iron axle assemblies and heavy steel frames. I would venture that the axle in my 14hp Bolens weighs almost as much as the entire Cub Cadet you can buy at HD today.
At least if you buy pro stuff, you're probably getting a pretty good facsimile of an older ag tractor. Newer consumer stuff is really just awful.
If I were doing it, I would research the ZT brands and find a pro example that is 2 years old with 150 hours on it. You can likely find one for 70% its MSRP even though it has only lived 10% of its life. Then do the same with a JD 322, 317, 318, or 430, but go older. Seriously. 20 years is a good start. 80s/90s is just fine. 700 hours is just fine. Heck, 1000 hours is just fine. It will probably outlive you without needing anything more than a spark plug change and a new battery every 7 years.
You have $13k to spend. You can easily get a lightly used professional ZT and a real, non-box-store riding mower for that money.