Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Twitter LinkedIn
    • FREE Email Newsletters
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    Twitter LinkedIn
    Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    • News
      • Arable & Agronomy
      • Dealership News
      • Environmental Land Management Scheme/Policy
      • Event News
      • Health & Safety
      • Machinery
      • People
      • World News
    • Farm Machinery
      • Amenity & Maintenance
      • Cultivations
      • Drilling
      • Grassland Equipment
      • Harvesting
      • Muck & Slurry
      • Sprayers
      • Telehandlers
      • Tractors
      • Tractor of the Year
      • Tyres & Tracks
      • Whatever happened to?
    • Precision Farming
    • Markets & Policy
    • Profiles
      • National Arable and Grassland Awards
      • Company Profiles
      • Reader Profiles
    • Livestock
      • Beef
      • Dairy
      • Sheep
    • Magazines
      1. July 2025 issue
      2. June 2025 issue
      3. Cereals event guide 2025
      4. May 2025 issue
      5. April 2025 issue
      6. March 2025 issue
      7. 2025 Tyre Developments supplement
      8. February 2025 issue
      9. National Arable and Grassland Awards supplement
      10. January 2025 issue
      11. December 2024 issue
      12. November 2024 issue
      13. October 2024 issue
      14. September 2024 issue
      15. August 2024 Issue
      16. 2024 Drills and Seeds supplement
      17. July 2024 Issue
      18. Cereals Supplement
      19. June 2024 Issue
      20. May 2024 Issue
      21. April 2024 Issue
      22. Tyres and Tracks Supplement
      23. March 2024 Issue
      24. National Arable & Grassland Award – Meet the Finalists
      25. February 2024 Issue
      26. January 2024 Issue
      27. December 2023
      28. Agritechnica Preview Supplement
      29. November 2023
      30. October 2023
      Featured

      July 2025 issue available now

      By Matthew TiltJuly 9, 2025
      Recent

      July 2025 issue available now

      July 9, 2025

      Cereals event guide 2025 available now

      June 20, 2025

      June 2025 issue available now

      June 2, 2025
    • Events
    • Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Machinery

    JCB Fastrac keeps turf grower’s sowing and mowing on track

    John SwireBy John SwireOctober 3, 20184 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

    Investment in a wide-working mower and a new tractor to pull it has transformed the task of keeping turf pristine and trim for a Worcestershire-based grower.

    The JCB Fastrac and V-Mow combination has slashed mowing time by as much as 75%, reducing the time taken to cut a 65 acre field from 6 hours with a 9m rotary roller mower to just one and a half hours.

    “It’s really made a big difference,” says Peter Lole of Teal Turf, who produces lawn turf across the whole of his 400 acre farm at Kempsey for lawn renovations, landscaping and new housing projects.

    The grass has to be trimmed regularly in the growing season – typically every other day – to keep it short but healthy and ready to harvest in thin strips. JCB Loadall telescopic handlers then collect pallets stacked with turf and load them on to delivery trucks.

    Mowing is therefore a full-time operation in the growing season, and one that has been made a lot quicker with the spectacular 16m wide mower and a new JCB Fastrac tractor to operate it.

    Peter Lole says: “We’ve not run a Fastrac before but a chance working demonstration by our local JCB dealer Ross Farm Machinery showed its potential. We originally intended using it just for cultivations and some trailer work but it’s turned out to be excellent for turf.”

    The Fastrac’s 50:50 weight distribution and wheels of equal size front and rear are a great asset for this application because with big, supple tyres fitted it treads as lightly as any of the Teal Turf operation’s smaller conventional tractors.

    Peter Lole emphasises that after sowing it is essential to cause no wheel marks at all.

    “With a conventional tractor, it can be quite difficult to get wide enough tyres of different diameters that don’t screw up the four-wheel drive mechanism,” he explains. “With the Fastrac, we fit the same size tyres all round so that’s not a problem and where the tractor’s been there’s not a mark to be seen.”

    Ross Farm Machinery sourced a set of Michelin 800/45 R30.5 CargoXBib low profile radial tyres from specialist farm and groundcare supplier Sam Moreton & Sons. They are designed for low compaction and low rolling resistance use on agricultural trailers but are proving ideal for the tractor’s turf work because of their supple carcase and flat rubber block tread.

    Operator Ed Bullock says they also have enough grip for the other work that the Fastrac undertakes, including subsoiling, shallow topsoil cultivation, stone burying and broadcasting seed from an adapted grain drill.

    He says: “I’ve used previous generation Fastrac tractors on our farm at home and the 4000 Series design really has moved things on, The 4220 is powerful enough to run the mower’s hydraulic pump using the economy pto setting, so the engine runs slower, resulting in less fuel consumption, and the stepless transmission makes it easy to drive at the ideal speed for the job.”

    The tractor’s legal 60kph top speed, all-round disc brakes, and suspension on both axles – a unique feature of the Fastrac compared with conventional tractors – also makes it an ideal machine for trailer work, hauling in compost to mix with topsoil and making deliveries of the resulting blend for landscaping projects.

    During the summer months, however, the JCB Fastrac is exclusively employed on the V-Mow, which is manufactured in Luxembourg by a fellow turf grower.

    Its ‘V’ shaped folding frame carries 23 hydraulically-driven Ransomes Sport 200 Lite cylinder mowing units for a precision cut and a pto-driven pump powers the individual motors on each cutting unit as well as the hydraulic cylinders on the frame.

    The drawbar is carried on the Fastrac’s lower linkage arms so that tight turns can be made using the tractor’s agile four-wheel steering, and satellite guidance ensures accurate bout matching with the wide mower – as well as the other implements it uses – to achieve maximum productivity.

    Tweet
    Share
    Share
    Pin
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Previous ArticleNew low cost ‘no frills’ small mixer wagon to be launched at Agriscot
    Next Article BVD in wales – over half of herds screened as extra push is launched
    John Swire

    Read Similar Stories

    Versatile dribble bar provides precise application

    July 9, 2025

    July 2025 issue available now

    July 9, 2025

    June tractor registrations see smaller decline

    July 7, 2025
    Most Read Stories

    High-quality bales and reliability key to baler

    July 13, 2025

    Polaris’ latest line-up of off-road vehicles put to the test

    July 12, 2025

    Polish factory key part of Joskin business

    July 11, 2025
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer

    The UK's leading agricultural machinery journal

    Twitter LinkedIn
    © 2024 MA Agriculture Ltd, a Mark Allen Group company

    Privacy Policy | Cookies Policy | Terms & Conditions

    • Farmers Weekly
    • AA Farmer
    • Poultry News
    • Pig World

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.