The Real Problem With Cheap RC Mowers

VMSpecialtyEquipment.com Today I tested the Creeworks RC mower in real river-bottom brush to see if these lower-cost remote-controlled mowers actually make sense for property owners, contractors, and vegetation management work. I’ve been thinking a lot about the RC mower industry lately. There are expensive commercial machines, cheaper imported machines, and a lot of buyers trying to figure out what they can actually trust. These mowers can be impressive, but there are still real questions about support, parts, durability, setup, and whether the machine will do what the advertising says it will do. In this video, I talk about where I think cheap RC mowers fit, why they remind me a little bit of Harbor Freight tools, and why I think the industry is missing trusted real-world testing. This test was not perfect. The mower broke a magnetic antenna, threw both belts after a stick got into the belt area, and I had to fix it in the field. But after putting the belts back on, the machine went right back to work and ended up transforming this river access area. That is the point of this channel: real vegetation management, real equipment testing, real problems, and real results. I’m not saying cheap RC mowers are junk. I own two of them, and I think they have a place. But buyers need honest information before spending thousands of dollars. Would you trust one of these machines for your property, business, or maintenance program? Let me know in the comments. #RCMower #RemoteControlMower #VegetationManagement #FlailMower #PropertyMaintenance #BrushClearing #Creeworks #LandManagement #SmallEquipment #VegetationMatters