I've seen a few of these old steel catchers turn up lately. There are a couple on gumtree and ebay at present. In fact this photo came from ebay. I doubt if the plastic blower housing sitting behind it in the photo has anything to do with the catcher. Seems like a mismatched part - looks to be the wrong era to me? They are always advertised as "unknown catchers", although some people have suggested Rover as a possibility. They do have the right shape for early Rover mowers, so I think Rover is a definite possibility. The shape of the opening with space for the rear flap to rest on, the two hooks on either side of the front opening, and the shape of the air vents on the sides all say "Rover" to me. I would like to try one on my old 70s Rover to see if it will fit, even though Rover were using plastic catchers by that time, but I have never found one of these steel ones close enough to home to try it. I asked a seller one time if he could give me the dimensions of the opening, but he didn't reply. Perhaps he knew I was only being snoopy and not really genuine about buying it.
Does anybody know what brand of catcher this actually is?
Source of photo: ebay ad.
Last edited by CyberJack; 31/05/1812:49 AM. Reason: Topic Heading.
Pity Victor didn't go steel with their 1970s thumb latch catchers, as the plastic they used wouldn't make the grade for cheap Hong Kong toys at the time.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Hello vint-mow and Mowerfreak I think you are pretty close there. ... It's a Rover by another name.
My best guess is that this is a Fairway catcher dated late 1960s or very early 1970s. Most of the big makers changed to plastic catchers by the new decade, but some did not (Pope), and some kept steel catchers on specific models (like Rover Model 14 and 32 side discharge mowers).
Like Mayfair was to Victa in the early days ('Victa' did not appear on early Mayfairs), the Fairway was Rover's stencil brand in the 1960s ('Rover' did not appear on Fairways). Fairways were originally 'toe-cutter' utilities, but later were offered as rear catcher models.
Note that a steel catcher was still being used on the standard Fairway in late 1970, whereas the Fairway Deluxe had the newer plastic catcher.
Hope this helps. ------------------------------- Jack
Thanks Jack, I think you are probably right. It is a very good match.
Mowerfreak, the early plastic Rover catchers were not the best either. They were made of blue plastic and not UV stabilized. Anybody who left their catcher out in the weather soon found them fading and cracking. Hard to find any these days that do not have big cracks and holes in them. Rover released a black catcher later on which was far more durable. Both the blue and black catchers had the Rover logo in big letters on either side.
A few months back a friend dropped me in a Rover catcher, I thought it looked a bit smaller than the usual catchers and it had a smaller shaped side vent. It is the plastic version of catcher to suit the Rover Fairway mower. I have taken a few comparison pics of it with the larger 18” standard catcher. So we now have pics of the metal and plastic a Fairway grass catchers.
Incidentally the first catcher in this thread has found its way to my place and is back behind a Fairway.
Metal catcher
Both metal and plastic versions
Plastic version both sides
Comparing the smaller Fairway catcher with the larger standard size one
Pretty hard to find either of these about, lucky to have them.