[1] Cowled Engine - 30128/57The spiel on the aluminium engine cowling says that it 'directs a blast of cooling air over all working parts'.
This was achieved by the flywheel fan producing airflow within the enclosure. I guess the air egress was
at the rear of the cowl but I have no evidence of that.
What is clear is that this patent application design was not an enduring one.
Better engine cooling could be achieved by a more close-fitting cowl. A secondary cowl could then be
used for aesthetic purposes. Here is a
The Old Machinery Magazine photograph (Eric Schulz):-
[2] Graduated Cutting Height - 30127/57For many years, Pope followed the
American trend of offering individual wheel height calibration.
I cannot find this specific patent, but I speculate that it involved the clear markings of height on a
visual scale. This patent feature would be short-lived, with Australian lawnmower designs favouring
one-point lever height adjustment.
[3] Windrower - 30130/57This is a patent feature that reveals a patent defect in this machine.
It was never designed to collect grass! It could not be equipped with a grass catcher that would
become so popular in the ensuing early years of the 1960s and then beyond.
The idea was that 'All cuttings' can be piled into a tidy windrow for easy pick up, or chopped fine
and broadcast evenly for mulch. The patent
cutter disc (discussed below) and the
skirted base were clearly designed to make this an early rotary
mulching mower.
TO BE CONTINUED ...