Category
Cylinder Mowers
Cylinder mowers are for buyers chasing cut quality, striping, and clean presentation on fine turf. They suit greens, tees, cricket squares, bowls, ornamental lawns, and sports surfaces where finish matters more than brute speed. Whether you are comparing a compact electric cylinder mower for controlled ornamental work or a heavier reel mower for formal turf programmes, the question is the same: how fine is the finish required, and how disciplined is the maintenance regime behind it.

Allett Buffalo 24 Wide-Cut Sports Cylinder
£7,794.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett C20 Approved Used Cylinder Mower
£2,874.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett C20 Pedestrian Cylinder Mower
£2,634.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett C27 Pedestrian Cylinder Mower
£3,474.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett C34 Approved Used Pedestrian Cylinder
£3,354.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett Kensington 17B Cylinder Mower
£1,314.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett Kensington 20B Cylinder Mower
£1,554.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Allett Tournament 17 Sports Cylinder Mower
£5,394.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
What separates cylinder mowers from rotary mowers?
A cylinder mower cuts with a scissor action between the cylinder and bottom blade. A rotary mower cuts by impact with a spinning blade. On fine turf, that difference shows up in presentation, striping, and the quality of the cut edge. The tradeoff is that a cylinder mower asks more of the operator, the sharpening schedule, and the site itself. It is not a forgiving machine for rough grass or casual maintenance.
- Cylinder mowers deliver the cleaner cut on fine, closely managed turf
- Rotary mowers cope better with longer grass, mixed conditions, and less exact maintenance
- Cylinder mowers reward disciplined mowing frequency
- Rotary machines tolerate interruptions in the cutting programme more gracefully
- For fairways and wider sports areas, also see Sports Turf & Greens
Who cylinder mowers are for
This category suits sports turf managers, cricket clubs, bowls clubs, golf facilities, formal-estate gardeners, and contractors maintaining ornamental finish areas where cut quality is visible to the naked eye and, more to the point, to the committee. Think short, frequently cut turf, level or well-prepared surfaces, and a maintenance plan that includes backlapping, adjustment, and proper setup. A cylinder mower is the right tool when presentation standards are high and the turf programme supports it. Buyers exploring Allett, Hayter, or specialist Kubota reel systems usually know they want a better finish; the important question is whether the rest of the regime will support the machine.
Who it isn’t for
A cylinder mower is the wrong choice for rough amenity grass, neglected paddock edges, twig-strewn ground, or any site where mowing intervals are irregular enough for growth to get away from you. It is also poor value if nobody on site wants responsibility for setup and cutting-unit condition. In that case, a pro-grade Walk-Behind & Self-Propelled or Ride-On Mower is usually the more honest answer.
Five questions to ask before you buy
- Is your turf fine, level, and regularly cut enough to justify a cylinder rather than a rotary machine?
- Who will set and maintain the cutting unit, and how confident are they with that responsibility?
- Are presentation and striping genuinely important, or just nice to have on paper?
- What mowing height are you aiming to hold consistently through the season?
- Will the machine work on dedicated fine turf only, or are you expecting it to tolerate rougher general-purpose use?








