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CAT Diesel-Powered Mower Has a Bigger Engine Than a Honda Civic

When your zero-turn has more displacement than a college kid's daily driver, you're doing something right.
Ferris IS6200 engine
Ferris

For a car site, we write an awful lot about mowers. But if you’re a gearhead who somehow isn’t part of the online lawn care community, how else would you know about the double-dually Ventrac 4200 XVD that the EPA killed? Or the Ferris IS6200, a gigantic zero-turn with a Caterpillar turbodiesel that’s larger than a Honda Civic engine? This blog is about the latter, and boy, what a machine it is.

Powering the Ferris is a CAT C1.7, a three-cylinder turbodiesel that’s more commonly found in wood chippers and trenchers. If you hadn’t guessed already, its displacement measures 1.7 liters, or 1,700cc. It’s good for 48 horsepower and as much as 122 lb-ft of torque, with a life expectancy of 4,000 to 5,000 hours. And I thought my Hustler with an 18-horse Kawasaki was impressive.

That engine is paired to a transmission with dual 21cc hydro gear pumps and 20.6-cubic-inch Parker wheel motors with an external oil cooler. That powertrain combo enables the rig to hit 12 miles per hour going forward and 6 mph in reverse. Speed isn’t all that matters, of course, and the 72-inch deck with a hydraulic lift is meant to cut as much grass as possible while still fitting around landscaping features like ponds, rock work, trees, and the like.

The Ferris IS6200 has a handful of other features that are automotive-adjacent. The mower sports a digital gauge cluster, which displays engine speed, torque, coolant temperature, oil pressure, and battery charge. Cooler still is the independent suspension with adjustable coilovers. It’s basically a track car. (OK, maybe not.)

It certainly weighs as much as one, though. Ferris’ spec sheet says the dry weight is 2,518 pounds, and that’s before you fill the 15-gallon fuel tank. All this proves that the IS6200 is not your granddad’s riding mower.

Caterpillar

Anyone looking to buy this for their own property or start a commercial mowing business will have to fork over at least $41,854. The warranty seems pretty solid, too, as all non-engine and non-suspension components are covered for two years and unlimited hours or four years and 500 hours—whichever occurs first. Ferris warranties the suspension for 10 years, and the engine is covered by CAT for 24 months or 2,000 hours (with unlimited hours for the first 12 months).

I don’t have a need for this, but maybe when I enter my Lawn Dad era. But I’ll have to win the lottery first.

Got a tip or question for the author? Contact them directly: caleb@thedrive.com

Caleb Jacobs Avatar

Caleb Jacobs

Senior Editor

From running point on new car launch coverage to editing long-form features and reviews, Caleb does some of everything at The Drive. And he really, really loves trucks.