ATTN: ALL BTR Builders (Gravely Model L)

GoldenMotor.com

curtisfox

Well-Known Member
Dec 29, 2008
6,046
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minesota
Pop the hood and some were on the engine is a model # tell you in a minute. That looks like a good mower yet put a pull behind seat on it and use it............Curt
 

HDCowboy

Member
Jan 3, 2015
44
0
6
Texas Gulf Coast
I will have to take a closer look at it next time I'm over there! My Stepdad built a pull behind seat for the thing and I mowed with it plenty of times but he must have been a little shorter than me though because I finally got tired of the handlebars on that thing beating up my knees every time I made a sharp turn. I was going to modify it after he died but decided between mowing my acre and my Mom's acre and a half I needed something a little more comfortable and quicker so I aint spending all day over there mowing grass.

I finally broke down and bought a new zero turn Gravely with a Kawasaki V-twin and been mowing with that thing ever since and all the old Gravely does now is sit in the garage. I reckon I ought to go ahead and shell out for a battery and crank it up every once in a while though before it freezes up or something. Cant beat those zero turns for mowing, it gets the job done in a quarter of the time than it did with the old Gravely or my old school Snapper I had.

 

curtisfox

Well-Known Member
Dec 29, 2008
6,046
3,948
113
minesota
it gets the job done in a quarter of the time,for sure. That's a nice mower.

Prolly get good money for the old one, a lot of colecters out there..............Curt
 

Intrepid Wheelwoman

New Member
Oct 29, 2011
2,830
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Hauraki District, New Zealand
I owned an old Gravely for a while back when I was doing the small holder dirt farmer/earth mother thing on an off-shore island. The thing was a bit of an orphan as it had too high a final drive ratio to seriously work properly for plowing. Some town councils here used Gravely tractors connected to a largish utility trailer for park maintenance and the like and I think I must've got some town council's reject. It certainly was cheap which should've told me something.

Eventually a neighbour heard on the island grapevine that I owned the Gravely and made me an offer. I was fed up with the thing by this time so I was glad to see it gone. After loading up the Gravely on his old truck he gave me the standard, 'You women don't know anything about how to operate machinery properly' speech. For my part I held my tongue and hid my grin because I knew that he wasn't going to have anymore success than me.

And I was right because that old Gravely did the rounds of nearly all the other other small holders like me I knew. It was taken to bits and put back together several times and various local 'experts' tinkered with it, but nobody had anymore luck with it than I did. It certainly ran well though and that big 'T' head engine was very seriously well made, but as I said it had the wrong final drive ratio for crop work. At the time it didn't cross my mind to put the engine in a bike frame, - I even had a couple of spare Matchless motorcycle gearboxes and clutches stashed away in the old bus I used as a storage shed, - so I suppose it wouldn't have been difficult to do. BUT with two wee kiddies and a partner who was in crisis most of the time with Bi-polar Disorder I didn't really have the time anyway.