Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
frontpage Posted by USMCR • May 22, 2021
frontpage Posted by USMCR • May 22, 2021

RYOBI 42" Electric 75 Ah Zero Turn Riding Lawn Mower w/ Bagging Kit

+ Free Shipping

$3,850

$4,199

8% off
Home Depot
165 Comments 121,278 Views
Get Deal at Home Depot
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Home Depot has RYOBI 42" Electric 75 Ah Zero Turn Riding Lawn Mower w/ Bagging Kit (RY48ZTR75-1A) on sale for $3,850. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member USMCR for posting this deal.

Features:
  • Up to 2.5 acres per charge
  • 4 high powered brushless motors
  • 42" heavy-duty steel deck
  • 2 precision cut steel blades, 12 position manual deck adjustment
  • Side discharge, mulching or bagging capable
  • 1.5" to 4.5" adjustable cutting height
  • Control panel: battery level indicator, unit hour meter, USB charging
  • Charges through standard 120-Volt outlet
  • Includes towing hitch and tow assembly hardware
  • Nylon mesh bagging bins and 2 bagging blades included

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This price is a $349 discount (8% Savings) over the list price of $4,199.
    • Warranty: 3-Year Warranty (more info)
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by USMCR
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Home Depot has RYOBI 42" Electric 75 Ah Zero Turn Riding Lawn Mower w/ Bagging Kit (RY48ZTR75-1A) on sale for $3,850. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member USMCR for posting this deal.

Features:
  • Up to 2.5 acres per charge
  • 4 high powered brushless motors
  • 42" heavy-duty steel deck
  • 2 precision cut steel blades, 12 position manual deck adjustment
  • Side discharge, mulching or bagging capable
  • 1.5" to 4.5" adjustable cutting height
  • Control panel: battery level indicator, unit hour meter, USB charging
  • Charges through standard 120-Volt outlet
  • Includes towing hitch and tow assembly hardware
  • Nylon mesh bagging bins and 2 bagging blades included

Editor's Notes

Written by qwikwit | Staff
  • About this Deal:
    • This price is a $349 discount (8% Savings) over the list price of $4,199.
    • Warranty: 3-Year Warranty (more info)
  • About this Store:

Original Post

Written by USMCR

Community Voting

Deal Score
+56
Good Deal
Get Deal at Home Depot

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

xkingpin
684 Posts
751 Reputation
The batteries on these are just golf cart batteries. You don't have to get them from a proprietary vendor. A huge advantage when these die. Leoch LPC12-75
kerryinvirginia
329 Posts
50 Reputation
3 years ago, we bought the 100Ah version of this, without the bagger. 3 years later, we still love it. We have 1.5 acres that are mowable, and we still have 35-40% battery left. All our yard equipment is now ryobi battery, except for the garden tiller.
KyleW1051
99 Posts
66 Reputation
I think it means the batteries still have juice after mowing that big yard, not the overall battery condition.

164 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Pro
May 26, 2021
3,929 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
May 26, 2021
fritzo
Pro
May 26, 2021
3,929 Posts
This thing looks bad-ass. I have their 40V Expand-it system tools and they're fantastic. Literally just as good as gas without the mess and maintenance. Thinking I'm going this route once my trusty Lawn Machines tractor gives up the ghost (which I'm afraid won't be for a while...bought the thing in 2005 and it still starts with the first key turn every time).
Pro
May 26, 2021
3,929 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
May 26, 2021
fritzo
Pro
May 26, 2021
3,929 Posts
Quote from Adam1976 :
My 14 year old riding mower has finally died, but the price of mowers are crazy. I've been pushing the lawn so far this spring, but that will not continue in the southern heat and humidity. Factoring in nearly 4 grand for a mower, maintenance, and the time spent; I may just hire a lawn crew and come out cheaper.
I have an acre yard with no tree cover and I pushed a 21" mower exactly 4 times before deciding NEVER AGAIN. Took hours and got heat stroke Big Grin

I agree $4K is too much, but with electric there's less moving parts, less maintenance, and less fuel costs, so I look at it as a wash in the end cost wise for something much more convenient to use.
May 27, 2021
608 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
May 27, 2021
creepster
May 27, 2021
608 Posts
Everyone is concerned with the cost of replacement batteries, and rightfully so. But isn't the time/labor/maintenance/inconvenience of a gas mower comes out to be the or more than the cost of the batteries after 5 years or so?
1
May 27, 2021
1,530 Posts
Joined Apr 2008
May 27, 2021
rushhound
May 27, 2021
1,530 Posts
Quote from TomI5144 :
Agreed. Considering you can get a Toro 42in ZT hydrostatic for $1100 less (not even on sale), or a 50in for $600 less, both eXmark like prosumer design. One thing about good old gas...it's not proprietary and you can buy a ton of it for the cost of battery replacement.

Quote from buzzbeer :
BS. show me a link
The math on the 42" Toro looks to be pretty much spot on.

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Toro-.../310836498
Last edited by rushhound May 26, 2021 at 05:19 PM.
May 27, 2021
7,411 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
May 27, 2021
chevvy
May 27, 2021
7,411 Posts
I'd have to charge this thing up twice to get my lawn mowed.
May 27, 2021
1,510 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
May 27, 2021
Rawimpact
May 27, 2021
1,510 Posts
Quote from creepster :
Everyone is concerned with the cost of replacement batteries, and rightfully so. But isn't the time/labor/maintenance/inconvenience of a gas mower comes out to be the or more than the cost of the batteries after 5 years or so?
Not IMO. I mean unlike a car, a spark plug, oil and filter costs 20 dollars and has to be done yearly or per 100hrs. I personally don't sharpen my blades, i just opt for new ones which costs 40 bucks regular price for two. I'm not going to do the math on gas vs electric but longevity wise there's no question the gas will outlast the battery degradation as long as the mfg is reputable.

I don't have a zero turn, I have a dinosaur Troybilt Pony riding mower. Bought it used for 500 bucks and i'm on my third year with it. In my area, I have to start mowing the lawn twice a month this time of the year and come July 3-4x a month until September before going back to 2x/month until novemberish. so 24 mowings a season I estimate after two year finished 50 mows.. mower so far has cost me $10 a session. If I would have gone new, the one I have costs 1300 so $54 dollars a session but with plenty of life.

Anyways, I'm just rambling. At the end of the day, for me, gas just makes more sense. I've got the Ryobi 40v line for trimmers, edgers etc because I hate starting and mixing gas.
May 27, 2021
608 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
May 27, 2021
creepster
May 27, 2021
608 Posts
Quote from Rawimpact :
Not IMO. I mean unlike a car, a spark plug, oil and filter costs 20 dollars and has to be done yearly or per 100hrs. I personally don't sharpen my blades, i just opt for new ones which costs 40 bucks regular price for two. I'm not going to do the math on gas vs electric but longevity wise there's no question the gas will outlast the battery degradation as long as the mfg is reputable.

I don't have a zero turn, I have a dinosaur Troybilt Pony riding mower. Bought it used for 500 bucks and i'm on my third year with it. In my area, I have to start mowing the lawn twice a month this time of the year and come July 3-4x a month until September before going back to 2x/month until novemberish. so 24 mowings a season I estimate after two year finished 50 mows.. mower so far has cost me $10 a session. If I would have gone new, the one I have costs 1300 so $54 dollars a session but with plenty of life.

Anyways, I'm just rambling. At the end of the day, for me, gas just makes more sense. I've got the Ryobi 40v line for trimmers, edgers etc because I hate starting and mixing gas.
Youre not factoring in labor, time, and the skills to perform those tasks. It's more than just the cost of parts

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

May 28, 2021
105 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
May 28, 2021
antidelldude
May 28, 2021
105 Posts
Quote from derce927 :
They also have that ego ztr but again they are so new and so expensive for a few year gamble like that. The ego has been good reviews but just came out. Ryobi has some bad reviews of it failing in first year or 2 having to take to nearest service center.
I have NO idea how the EGO stuff gets such great reviews. I bought damn near everything they make and am disappointed. Ryobi's mower cuts better, but the battery doesn't last as long. My 20 year old Toro cuts better than both, and yes I have tried different blades.

My Kobalt String Trimmer is lighter, easier to handle, and has great battery life. While the Ego, even with the 2.5a battery needs a strap to be kinda comfortable, and their trigger is HORRIBLE.

The edger attachment is borderline useless, I have to fight the ever living crap out of it due to the torque of the motor.

The blower is...mediocre. I have both the newest backpack and the handheld. I still have to pull out my gas to clean up leaves. The battery might last 15-20 minutes on Turbo mode, which is the only useful mode. To be fair, everyone sucks in this battery category.

The hedge trimmer though, that thing is a beast as is the poll trimmer.

The smaller snow blower is a horrid design and burns through rubber pads, I look forward to upgrading to the all steel design.

AND my lawn mower freakin' broke after a year. The drive train locked up. I couldn't push it manually anymore, so stupid, barely lasted a season. I hope the new one Ego sent me lasts longer than a year.

Overall, no way most of their shit deserves the reviews it gets. I almost think so many people are just happy to not be dealing with gas and that bias's them heavily.

I wish I returned most of it but oh well... I'll try to get another few years out of it, bitching every time I use them. Hopefully the next gen won't suck as much.
May 29, 2021
5,358 Posts
Joined Sep 2016
May 29, 2021
anonymous2929239
May 29, 2021
5,358 Posts
I have one 100 watt panel on my shed, I can fit probably 4 total 100 watt panels. if I have 400 watts with this 36/48v renogy MPPT.

would this be enough to charge/maintain one of these? I may really look into getting one of these in future.

https://www.renogy.com/36v-48v-ro...ontroller/
May 29, 2021
105 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
May 29, 2021
antidelldude
May 29, 2021
105 Posts
Quote from SorrowNightshade :
I have one 100 watt panel on my shed, I can fit probably 4 total 100 watt panels. if I have 400 watts with this 36/48v renogy MPPT.

would this be enough to charge/maintain one of these? I may really look into getting one of these in future.

https://www.renogy.com/36v-48v-ro...ontroller/
Yes. But you'd have to make an adapter to interface, probably not worth it. OR You could go back up to 110V then use the actual Ego charger. Even if you waste some energy, if that's all you're doing with those panels, it'll be fine.
May 29, 2021
5,358 Posts
Joined Sep 2016
May 29, 2021
anonymous2929239
May 29, 2021
5,358 Posts
Quote from antidelldude :
Yes. But you'd have to make an adapter to interface, probably not worth it. OR You could go back up to 110V then use the actual Ego charger. Even if you waste some energy, if that's all you're doing with those panels, it'll be fine.
currently, I have 1 solar panel 100 watt, with a PWM for 12v controller, and I have battery tender leads on the mower, (the quick connect) and I simply cut the other end of the tender cables, and put them directly into the PWM.

its been charging for a year and maintaining just fine, but I know for 75ah 48v I would need 2 or 4 panels probably. 2 would possibly be even fine if I mow once a week.

making the adapter to plug into the mower could be tricky, unless there's literally a positive/negative lead like a regular 12v battery. not sure. or maybe get an extra charging cord, and if there's just a positive/negative in the wire harness, cut it, and insert it into the PWM/MPPT. since its literally positive/negative wire lead into it.

I used to have issues where 12v battery would die every year after winter from not being used, well it worked perfect this spring, battery was sitting on PWM all winter long, appears to kept it perfectly healthy.

my shed is FAR from my house, so running hardwire lines isn't feasible, if I could get a genuine 48v solar set up on my shed like my current 12v set, id be game even if few hundred bucks. worth it imo long term. I'd probably even leave the current 12v panel up there with the current set up, and run 3-4 new panels for a 48v charger.

so id have a 12 and 36/48 solar charger!

my sheds pretty damn large.
Jun 5, 2021
47 Posts
Joined May 2018
Jun 5, 2021
VictorJB
Jun 5, 2021
47 Posts
Anyone get theirs yet? I ordered one on the 16th and I'm still waiting for mine to show up.
Jun 6, 2021
22 Posts
Joined Sep 2011
Jun 6, 2021
GAmd22
Jun 6, 2021
22 Posts
Quote from VictorJB :
Anyone get theirs yet? I ordered one on the 16th and I'm still waiting for mine to show up.
Did yours ship? I just ordered mine on Friday and it shipped from Ohio yesterday. I accidentally selected store pickup and they wouldn't let me change unfortunately.
Jun 6, 2021
1,253 Posts
Joined Dec 2016
Jun 6, 2021
kwick7
Jun 6, 2021
1,253 Posts
Anyone know if they monthly (or so) 10% off depot coupons work on these? And if so if you can use the coupon when on sale?

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jun 6, 2021
22 Posts
Joined Sep 2011
Jun 6, 2021
GAmd22
Jun 6, 2021
22 Posts
Quote from kwick7 :
Anyone know if they monthly (or so) 10% off depot coupons work on these? And if so if you can use the coupon when on sale?
Yes - I paid $50 for a 15% off online purchase coupon. It's capped at $200 but it saved me $150 in total

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All