spacer
Sports turf advice; bowls vandalism; World Cup marking; Belfry invest; Oldham appoint
IN THIS ISSUE
ONE-ON-ONE SPORTS TURF ADVICE
VANDALS THREATEN BOWLING GREEN
ASTON UNI PLAYS ON
FAMILY FIRM SUPPLY WORLD CUP
OLDHAM ATHLETIC APPOINT
ECOSOLVE FOUNDER DIES
THE BELFRY INVEST IN SLITTERS
DEMO DAYS UNDERWAY
ATT LAUNCH 26" INFINI SYSTEM
£250,000 KIT INVESTMENT
TECHNICAL SALES PROMOTIONS
ALL QUIET ON THE NORTH WEST FRONT
SEND TO A FRIEND
Click here to send this email to a friend or colleague »
USEFUL LINKS
CONTACT US
Land Power Publications 
Pipe House 
Lupton Road 
Wallingford 
Oxon OX10 9BT


Ph: 01491 837117 

PUBLISHER
Chris Biddle
07785 295 625
Email Chris

EDITOR
Steve Gibbs
07929 438213
Email Steve

 Click to read

 

TURF PRO 

All new, all digitial, with rich content throughout

LAUNCH ISSUE

Flood Prevention:
LDCA's Bruce Brockway explains

Expert help for grassroots
Jason Booth's new role

Industry News

Latest Products

Final Whistle


For details of how to advertise in both Turf Pro digital magazine and on this Turf Pro Weekly Briefing e-newsletter, click here

spacer
spacer
ALL QUIET ON THE NORTH WEST FRONT
Clubs choose hybrid electric mowers

Greenkeepers in the north-west of England are preserving the peace and tranquility of their courses, thanks to John Deere's 2500E hybrid electric triplex greens mowers.

Wallasey Golf Club in The Wirral is particularly anxious to keep local residents happy and specified two new 2500Es from local John Deere dealer Turner Groundscare of Tarvin, Chester to help them do just that.


Wallasey Golf Club's head greenkeeper Chris Peddie on the John Deere 2500E hybrid electric greens mower, cutting one of the greens that borders residential housing.

"The new mowers deliver optimum cutting at low noise levels, which is ideal for us as housing fringes the eighth and ninth holes of our 18-hole course," says Chris Peddie, who has been Wallasey's head greenkeeper for 22 years. "Noise can be an issue when you're often working from 6.30am, and even earlier on competition days."

Keeping quiet isn't the only concern for Chris and his five-man greenkeeping team. "A links course like Wallasey is hard on cutting edges, as the sand can quickly blunt them. We regrind all our cutting units, so we need to know how easy they are to strip down. John Deere has simplified the removal of the groomers and rear brushes by introducing quick release clips - this makes the task a matter of minutes, not hours, and so saves us a lot of time."

The 2500Es need less servicing too, says Chris, and the hybrid electric design minimises the biggest worry of all - hydraulic oil leaks, which he's suffered three times in his greenkeeping career. Limiting the risks of such leaks offers Chris added reassurance, he says.

Noise and oil leaks are also key issues at Delamere Forest Golf Club in Cheshire, which bought its first John Deere 2500E greens mower with QA5 quick-adjust cutting units from Turner Groundscare in spring 2013.


Course manager Andrew Ralphs of Delamere Forest Golf Club - pictured with John Deere dealer salesman Richard Owens of Turner Groundscare - also chose a John Deere 2500E to minimise noise and the risk of oil spills on his course.

Course manager Andrew Ralphs says: "We've always bought John Deere mowers, but invested in our first 2500E because I wanted to minimise noise and the risk of oil spills on the course at a time when we are undertaking an extensive three-year renovation programme on our 88 bunkers and a number of tees.

"The quality of build and quietness in operation are everything I expected they would be, and my concerns over the risks of hydraulic oil leaks on the greens have been laid to rest," adds Andrew, who has also suffered from burst hydraulic lines during his 24 years at Delamere Forest.

"We use the 2500E twice weekly on the greens. It allows us to reduce fuel consumption, noise levels and leaks, without compromising on cut quality."


Email Newsletter Software by Newsweaver