
Slope mowing for embankments, steep banks and hazardous ground
Best for roadside banks, dam faces, maintained slopes and other terrain where operator safety, stand-off distance and traction matter more than deck width alone.
Open GuideUse these application guides when the real question is not just cutting width, but the job itself: slope maintenance, orchard lanes, vineyard rows, solar-site vegetation control, rough grass recovery, roadside embankments or mixed contractor routes.
These six guides help buyers move from a real work situation into the right machine family, compare page or quote conversation.

Best for roadside banks, dam faces, maintained slopes and other terrain where operator safety, stand-off distance and traction matter more than deck width alone.
Open Guide
Best for orchards and vineyards where row width, turning space, transport between plots and under-row vegetation matter more than headline deck width.
Open Guide
Best for field edges, neglected plots and stronger vegetation reset work where routine mowing is no longer enough and a flail platform becomes the better fit.
Open Guide
Best for roadside banks, drainage edges and public-facing embankments where stand-off safety and dependable daily output matter.
Open Guide
Best for solar-site perimeters, utility corridors, service roads and fenced infrastructure where mixed growth and controlled remote operation matter more than a width-first choice.
Open Guide
Best for contractors balancing cleaner routine mowing, rougher recovery work and movement between mixed customer sites.
Open GuideStart by choosing the family that best fits the work. Detailed model comparison becomes easier once the buyer already knows whether the job points to a compact mower, a standard flail mower or a flagship flail mower.
Best when compact access, easier transport and cleaner recurring mowing still matter more than heavier flail output.
Best when rough grass, denser regrowth, maintained slopes and broader daily productivity matter more than the lightest compact option.
Best when the buyer wants the premium contractor package with stronger standard specification and a flagship machine position.
These pages should make the buying process simpler. The goal is to help visitors identify the right family before they compare models, request a quote or prepare a better enquiry.
Use application guides to start from the job itself: steep banks, orchard rows, fenced infrastructure, rough grass, roadside work or mixed contractor routes.
A cleaner shortlist usually starts with family fit. Compare pages and model pages work better after the family is already clear.
Once the application is clear, compare pages help reduce the shortlist without forcing the buyer to jump straight into product details too early.
Each application guide should lead naturally into a product family, a compare page, project guidance or a quote conversation.
Application guides should point visitors to the next useful page. Use compare pages to narrow two realistic options, project guidance to prepare a better enquiry, and product families when the machine type is clear but the final model still is not.
Move into compare pages once the application is clear and the buyer needs to reduce wrong-model risk.
Use project guidance when the family is nearly clear but the final width or package level still needs one more check.
Use this page for dealer enquiries, regional sales enquiries and workshop-based service cooperation.
Application pages help buyers start from the actual job. That reduces wrong-model risk and makes the move into compare pages, product families and pricing requests more accurate.
Start with the page that best matches the real job: slopes and embankments, orchard and vineyard rows, rough grass recovery, solar and utility maintenance, roadside work or mixed contractor land care.
No. Application pages explain the job context and family fit. Compare pages then narrow the shortlist, and product pages finish the model-level decision.
Tell us whether the job is mainly slope work, orchard-row access, solar or utility vegetation control, rough grass recovery, roadside embankment maintenance or mixed contractor land care. We will suggest the most suitable family and the next page to review.