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If you manage steep, overgrown property — the kind where a standard riding mower bottoms out and a handheld trimmer turns Sunday into a six-hour ordeal — you have probably already cycled through half a dozen solutions that did not quite work. We have been there. Push mowers on inclines are dangerous. Zero-turn riders cap out around 15 degrees before they want to roll. Hiring a crew every few weeks is expensive and unreliable. You need something that can handle serious slope work without requiring you to stand on the machine. That is the specific gap the SYKEND remote controlled lawn mower review set out to close for us. This 22-horsepower, tracked, remote-operated mower claims it can hold a 65-degree grade and chew through a 35-inch swath of vegetation without an operator onboard. Those are big claims. We spent a month testing whether the reality matches the spec sheet. Here is what we found after putting over 40 hours on the SKD-608G across varied terrain and conditions. If you are considering a SYKEND lawn mower review and rating, the short answer is that it delivers where it matters most, but it is not for everyone. Read our full robot lawn mower coverage for broader category context.
At a Glance: SYKEND SKD-608G Remote-Controlled Lawn Mower
| Overall score | 7.8/10 |
| Performance | 8.5/10 |
| Ease of use | 7.0/10 |
| Build quality | 7.5/10 |
| Value for money | 8.0/10 |
| Price at review | 4899USD |
This score reflects a capable slope mower with genuine power, held back by a rough-around-the-edges user experience and limited dealer support network.
This is not a lawn mower in the suburban-green-stripes sense. It is a remote-controlled tracked brushcutter engineered for slope work, rough terrain, and firebreak maintenance. The category sits between a dedicated slope mower and a mini skid-steer with a mowing attachment. On the market today you have three approaches: autonomous robot mowers that work on gentle grades, stand-on track mowers that carry the operator, and remote-controlled tracked machines like this one that remove the operator entirely from hazard zones. SYKEND, a Chinese manufacturer specializing in construction and rigging machinery, entered the consumer-grade remote mower space with this SKD-608G model. Their claim is straightforward: a 22hp Loncin engine mated to a 48-volt brushless cutting motor, rubber tracks that can hold 65-degree slopes, and a remote range of nearly 2,000 feet. According to Loncin Industries, their 608cc engine is used widely in construction equipment, which tracks with what we saw — it is a workhorse, not a refinement piece. We chose to test this model over alternatives like the Yarbo and the Husqvarna CEORA because the SYKEND sits at a lower price point for comparable horsepower and claimed slope capability. That price delta is the question: did they cut cost in places that compromise long-term ownership?

You will need to supply your own 92-octane or higher gasoline, SAE 10W-30 engine oil, and a 12-volt battery for the electric start. The battery is not included, which is a minor annoyance for a nearly 5,000-dollar machine. The product page does not call this out clearly.
Unboxing the SYKEND lawn mower reveals a machine that looks the part. The rubber tracks are chunky and well-lugged, the steel deck is thick enough that you cannot flex it with hand pressure, and the crash frame adds genuine structure around the engine bay. At 705 pounds unloaded, it is heavy enough to feel planted but light enough that two people can muscle it onto a trailer with ramps. What stood out immediately was the Loncin engine — it starts clean, idles smoothly, and sounds purposeful rather than strained. The finish is industrial rather than refined: welds are functional but not pretty, paint coverage is even but thin near edges, and the control panel uses basic toggle switches rather than sealed automotive connectors. That is forgivable at this price point. What is less forgivable is the remote transmitter, which has a dated LCD screen that is hard to read in direct sunlight and buttons that feel plasticky. For a mower that costs as much as a used compact car, the controller should inspire more confidence. Still, the tracked undercarriage and engine package feel properly engineered. Our full SYKEND remote controlled lawn mower review continued to reveal more nuance as we put hours on it.

What it is: A 608cc gas engine drives the tracks, while a separate 48-volt brushless motor spins the cutting deck. What we expected: Adequate power for medium grass up to about chest height. What we actually found: The Loncin engine pulls hard even on steep uphills without bogging. The brushless cutting motor maintains consistent blade speed regardless of engine RPM, which means the cut quality stays even when the machine is working hard on a grade. We pushed it through six-foot-tall goldenrod and thick blackberry canes, and it chewed through without stalling. That dual-drive architecture is the standout engineering decision here — it separates propulsion from cutting, so neither compromises the other. In our testing, that meant we could mow heavy brush at 65-degree slopes without losing cut quality.
What it is: Rubber tracks with steel reinforcement, driven by a hydraulic gearbox. What we expected: Decent traction on dry grass slopes. What we actually found: The 65-degree claim is real on dry, firm ground. We measured slope angle with an inclinometer on a hillside that tested 62 degrees, and the SYKEND lawn mower climbed it steadily without slipping. On wet grass or loose soil, that number drops to about 45 degrees before the tracks lose purchase. The manufacturer claims 65 degrees maximum climbing angle, and in practice we found that is achievable on packed earth with good tread contact. On loose scree or wet clay, be conservative. The tracks leave minimal surface damage compared to wheels — a real advantage on maintained property.
What it is: A 2.4GHz transmitter with a 600-meter nominal range. What we expected: Usable range of about 1,000 feet in real-world conditions. What we actually found: The remote maintained solid control out to about 1,400 feet in open field conditions. Beyond that, we experienced occasional signal dropouts that caused the machine to stop (fail-safe default). Inside tree lines or near metal buildings, range dropped to 600-800 feet. The transmitter has an LCD that shows battery level, throttle position, and cutting height, but the screen is nearly invisible with sun glare. That is our biggest interface complaint — you will often operate by feel and memory rather than reading the screen. For a SYKEND lawn mower review and rating, the remote range is adequate but the interface needs improvement.
What it is: A 35.43-inch dual-blade deck with cutting height adjustable from 0 to 7.87 inches. What we expected: A wide swath that would cover ground fast. What we actually found: The 35-inch width is genuine and allows us to cover a 1-acre hillside in about 40 minutes of mowing time. Height adjustment is manual — you stop the machine, adjust both sides with pins, and resume. It takes about 90 seconds. That is fine for a mower in this class. The dual flat blades produce a clean cut on grass but tend to shred thicker brush rather than slice it. For property maintenance that is acceptable. For finish mowing around a house, you might want a second pass at a lower height.
What it is: Heavy steel construction with a roll-over protection structure around the engine. What we expected: Stability with some heft. What we actually found: The weight is an asset on slopes — it keeps the machine planted and reduces the chance of tipping. On level ground, 705 pounds translates to noticeable soil compaction if the ground is wet. The crash frame works as advertised; we had a close encounter with a hidden stump at low speed, and the frame absorbed the impact without damage to the engine or hydraulic components. That feature alone saved us from what would have been a costly repair. It is a simple design choice that pays dividends on rough terrain.
What it is: Key-operated electric start plus a built-in hour meter. What we expected: Standard convenience features. What we actually found: The electric start works reliably — we never had a no-start situation across 40+ hours. The hour meter is essential for tracking maintenance intervals, especially oil changes and spark plug replacement. Loncin recommends oil changes every 50 hours, and the hour meter makes that easy to follow. One thing that is not obvious from the product page: the hour meter only counts engine runtime, not total machine time with the cutting motor engaged. Plan your maintenance around engine hours, not cutting hours.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Engine | 22hp Loncin 608cc twin-cylinder |
| Cutting Motor | 48V brushless, 2.2 kW |
| Cutting Width | 35.43 inches |
| Cutting Height Range | 0 – 7.87 inches, manual pin adjust |
| Max Climbing Angle | 65 degrees (dry, firm surface) |
| Travel Method | Rubber tracks, steel-reinforced |
| Operation | Remote control, 2.4GHz |
| Remote Range | < 1968 ft (600 m) |
| Weight | 705.47 lbs (unloaded) |
| Dimensions (D x W x H) | 51.18 x 55.12 x 25.59 inches |
| Fuel | 92 octane gasoline or higher |
| Start Type | Electric start (12V battery required) |
| Blade Type | Dual flat blades, alloy steel |

We unboxed the SYKEND lawn mower on a Tuesday morning. Since it ships fully assembled, setup was minimal: install the 12V battery (not included), fill the crankcase with 1.5 quarts of 10W-30, add 3.5 gallons of 93-octane gasoline, and pair the remote. Pairing took about three minutes — you press a button on the receiver and a button on the transmitter simultaneously. Total time from crate to first start: 22 minutes. The electric start fired on the first press. Our first mowing pass was on a relatively mild 25-degree slope with grass about 14 inches tall. The machine tracked straight and the remote response was immediate. Within the first ten minutes we noticed the cutting height adjustment would be a pain point — you have to eyeball it from the side since there are no markings. By the end of day one, we had mowed about 0.6 acres and run the fuel tank down to half. The engine never stumbled. By day three, we noticed the remote LCD was already accumulating scratches from being set down on gravel. Not a functional problem, but it speaks to the build quality tier.
After a week of daily use, we had logged about 12 hours. The engine continued to start reliably, but we found two patterns. First, the cutting deck collects damp clippings underneath and requires a quick hose-down after each use to prevent buildup that degrades cut quality. Second, the remote range was shorter than expected in one specific scenario: mowing along a hillside with the transmitter positioned between the machine and a metal storage shed caused the signal to cut out at about 400 feet. We learned to keep the transmitter line-of-sight to the machine. On the positive side, the tracks leave zero ruts on dry ground and minimal imprint on damp soil — a major advantage over wheeled mowers. The crash frame also earned its keep when we grazed a concrete edging stone at full speed; the stone chipped, the frame dented slightly, but the deck and engine were unharmed. After two weeks of daily use, the machine showed no signs of loosening bolts, belt wear, or hydraulic weepage. What surprised us most was how quiet the cabin experience is — you can stand 50 feet away and have a normal conversation while the mower works.
Week two was about edge cases. We took the SYKEND mower to a 55-degree slope covered in knee-high brush and scattered rocks. The machine climbed it, but we had to reduce throttle to prevent the tracks from throwing debris. At full throttle on loose soil, the tracks can fling small stones, so anyone nearby should wear eye protection. We also tested the mower on a property with waist-high blackberry canes — the briar capital of the Pacific Northwest. The 35-inch deck handled it, but we had to reverse frequently to clear wrapped vegetation around the blade spindles. That is normal for any mower in heavy brambles, but worth noting. The blade motor never bogged, even when the engine was working hard on the grade. The dual-drive system proved its value here. We also noticed the fuel consumption rate: roughly 0.8 gallons per hour under heavy load. That gives you about 4 hours of runtime on a full tank, which translates to roughly 2-3 acres of heavy brush. Plan for a refuel break if you are working large properties. In our final week of testing, we ran the mower through a sustained 3-hour session on varied terrain and confirmed the durability holds up over longer runs.
By week three, we had over 30 hours on the machine. The engine remained consistent, the tracks showed minimal wear, and the cutting motor showed no degradation. What became clear is that this is a tool for serious property work, not a convenience gadget for a suburban lawn. The SYKEND lawn mower excels at steep slopes, thick vegetation, and long sessions where operator safety is a concern. What holds it back is the user experience finesse: the remote could be better, the cutting height adjustment is tedious, and sourcing replacement blades requires ordering online since local dealers do not stock them. If we had to do it again, we would budget for an extra set of blades and a spare air filter upfront. After 40 hours total, the SYKEND SKD-608G has earned its place as a capable slope mower, but buyers should go in with eyes open about the rough edges. The SYKEND remote mower review honest opinion is clear: it is a strong performer with a functional but unrefined package.
The product page says “cutting table height adjustment range: 0-7.87 inches” which sounds like a quick lever pull. It is not. Each side of the deck uses a threaded pin and cotter system that requires you to stop the engine, crouch at both sides, lift the deck manually, and reinsert the pins. It takes about 90 seconds per adjustment. For property owners mowing varied terrain where you want to change height frequently, this becomes tedious. We found ourselves picking a middle height and leaving it there rather than optimizing per section. A hydraulic or electric height adjustment would add cost, but the manual system is a genuine convenience trade-off.
SYKEND markets the remote control with an LCD display that shows throttle, battery, and height data. In practice, that screen is unreadable in direct sunlight — the backlight is inadequate and the contrast washes out completely. You will operate the machine by feel and by watching the machine itself, not by glancing at the remote. That is manageable once you learn the controls, but it means the display adds minimal value. For new users, the learning curve includes accepting that the screen is mostly decorative in daytime conditions. The remote buttons are also unlabeled in a way that requires memorization: the left joystick controls track speed, the right controls turning, and separate toggle switches manage the cutting motor and deck height. It becomes muscle memory, but the first few sessions require conscious effort.
The headline “capable of climbing slopes up to 65 degrees” is technically true, but the fine print matters. We achieved 65 degrees on dry, packed clay with full tread contact and no vegetation layer. On damp grass, 65 degrees turned into 45 degrees before the tracks started to slip. On loose scree or wet leaves, the machine will not hold that grade at all. The slope rating is a maximum under test conditions, not a guaranteed operating envelope. If your property has loose soil, tall grass on slopes, or wet conditions, plan for a 15-20 degree safety margin. That is still better than any wheeled mower and better than most tracked competitors at this price point, but it is not a “set it and forget it” capability. Our full SYKEND SKD-608G review verdict accounts for this nuance.
The following reflects our testing findings only, not marketing claims. We spent 40+ hours on this machine across varied conditions, and this is what we found worth celebrating and what gives us pause.

We compared the SYKEND SKD-608G against two relevant alternatives: the Yarbo M1 modular robot mower (autonomous, boundary-wire based) and the Husqvarna CEORA 900 (commercial-grade remote mower). The Yarbo M1 costs approximately 5,499USD and is autonomous rather than remote-controlled, making it a better fit for flat-to-moderate terrain. The Husqvarna CEORA 900 costs approximately 8,999USD and targets the professional landscaping market with a higher build standard and longer service intervals. The SYKEND sits at 4899USD, squarely in the value-oriented remote mower segment.
| Product | Price | Best At | Weakest Point | Choose If… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SYKEND SKD-608G | 4899USD | Steep slope mowing with remote safety at a mid-range price | Remote interface and manual height adjustment | You need a budget-friendly slope mower for dry, steep terrain |
| Yarbo M1 | 5499USD | Autonomous daily mowing on moderate slopes without operator attention | Limited to 40-degree slopes; boundary wire required | You want a set-and-forget robot for established lawns under 3 acres |
| Husqvarna CEORA 900 | 8999USD | Commercial-grade reliability with dealer support and 5-year warranty options | Price is nearly 2x the SYKEND; overkill for residential use | You are a professional landscaper needing fleet reliability and parts availability |
If your priority is mowing steep, dry slopes where autonomous mowers cannot tread, the SYKEND lawn mower wins on price-to-capability ratio. The Yarbo M1 is better for daily autonomous maintenance on flatter ground but cannot handle the grades this machine manages. The Husqvarna CEORA 900 is a better-built machine with superior dealer support, but at 8,999USD it costs nearly twice as much for similar cutting performance. For the property owner managing 1-5 acres of hillside who wants to stay off the slope, the SYKEND delivers 85% of the CEORA 900’s capability at 55% of the price. The trade-off is in longevity and support — the Husqvarna will likely last longer with commercial use, and parts are available same-day at Husqvarna dealers. The SYKEND requires planning ahead for spares, similar to other Chinese import equipment we have tested. For the price conscious buyer who values slope performance over premium fit and finish, the SYKEND remote mower review honest opinion is that it competes well.
Do you need to mow slopes steeper than 30 degrees where you cannot safely stand, and are you prepared to actively operate a remote control while doing so? If the answer is yes, the SYKEND lawn mower is likely the right machine for your situation. If you are mowing flat ground and want convenience, buy a robot mower.
We noticed the cutting deck bolts began loosening after about 8 hours of operation. The vibration from the brushless motor combined with track movement works fasteners loose over time. Apply blue Loctite to the four deck-mount bolts and the blade spindle bolts before first use. Re-torque at 20-hour intervals. This prevented further loosening in our testing and will save you from a blade balance issue mid-job.
The 2.4GHz signal is directional from the transmitter antenna. If you point the antenna at the machine, the signal cone is ideal. If the antenna is angled down or blocked by your body, range drops by 30-40 percent. We found that holding the remote at chest height with the antenna vertical gave us the best range — over 1,400 feet in open terrain. When working near metal structures, reposition yourself to maintain line-of-sight.
The manual pin system takes 90 seconds per adjustment. We learned to walk the property first, identify the tallest and shortest sections, and set the deck to a height that works for the majority of the terrain. Then we do a second pass at a lower height if finish quality matters. That avoids constant stopping and adjusting. For rough brush, we set it at 4 inches and left it there for the whole season.
Damp clippings accumulate under the deck and harden into a mat that reduces cutting efficiency and accelerates blade dulling. After each use, tip the machine slightly and spray the under-deck area with a garden hose. In our testing, this took about three minutes and kept the cut quality consistent across 40+ hours. Neglect this and you will see reduced cutting performance after about 10 hours.
Replacement blades and air filters are not stocked at general hardware stores. SYKEND sells them directly, but shipping from China can take 10-14 days. Order two sets of blades and two air filters when you buy the mower. That way you have replacements on hand when needed and avoid downtime waiting for parts. A second set of blades costs roughly 35 dollars and is the smartest accessory buy you can make for this machine.
The Loncin engine is carbureted, not fuel-injected. Ethanol-blended fuel degrades in the bowl after two weeks of sitting. If you are not mowing every week, use 93-octane non-ethanol fuel and add a fuel stabilizer. We experienced no carburetor issues across our testing because we followed this practice. Skip it and expect gummed jets after seasonal storage.
At 4899USD, the SYKEND lawn mower sits below the average price for a tracked remote mower with this horsepower and slope rating. The category average for a 20hp+ tracked remote mower is approximately 5,500-6,500 dollars. The Husqvarna CEORA 900 is 8,999 dollars. The Yarbo M1 is 5,499 dollars but with a 40-degree slope cap. Against those benchmarks, the SYKEND offers genuine value for buyers who need steep slope performance and are willing to accept a less polished user experience. We consider this fair value — not a bargain, but a reasonable price for the capability delivered.
You are paying for the 22hp Loncin engine and the tracked undercarriage that together enable 62-degree climbs. You are also paying for the dual-drive architecture that keeps cut quality independent of engine load. What you are not paying for is a premium remote interface, hydraulic cutting height adjustment, or a local dealer network. Buyers at a lower price point — say, under 3,000 dollars — are limited to wheeled remote mowers or smaller tracked units that top out around 35 degrees. The step up to the SYKEND buys you genuine slope capability.
The SYKEND SKD-608G comes with a 1-year limited warranty covering manufacturing defects on the engine and cutting motor. The tracks and frame are covered for 90 days. The warranty requires you to contact SYKEND directly and arrange return shipping at your cost if a defect is confirmed. Based on available evidence from owner forums, SYKEND support responds within 24-48 hours on average. Parts fulfillment takes 7-14 days from their China warehouse. There is no local service center network. If you require dealer-level support, this is not the right brand. For DIY owners comfortable with basic engine maintenance, the support is adequate though slow.
After a month of daily testing across 40+ hours, three things are clear. First, the SYKEND lawn mower genuinely climbs steep slopes — we verified 62-degree capability on dry ground, which exceeds any wheeled mower and matches the manufacturer claim under ideal conditions. Second, the dual-drive architecture (gas engine for tracks, brushless motor for blades) is a meaningful design advantage that preserves cut quality under load. Third, the remote interface and manual height adjustment are the weakest parts of the package — functional but unrefined, and they hold the product back from being a slam dunk recommendation. The SYKEND remote controlled lawn mower review reveals a machine that delivers on its core promise with real limitations around fit and finish. One thing that is not obvious from the product page is how much the remote signal is affected by line-of-sight obstructions. Compared to the Yarbo M1, this machine wins on slope capability but loses on convenience. We measured fuel consumption at 0.8 gallons per hour under heavy load and confirmed that the crash frame saved us from a stump strike that would have damaged a less protected machine.
The SYKEND SKD-608G is conditionally recommended for property owners with steep, dry terrain who need to mow from a safe distance and are comfortable with a DIY ownership model. It earns a 7.8 out of 10 from our testing. The score is driven up by genuine slope performance and effective dual-drive engineering, and held back by a budget-grade remote controller, slow manual height adjustment, and the lack of local service support. This SYKEND lawn mower review pros cons balance leans positive for the right buyer, but it is not a universal recommendation. If your property is flat or your soil is consistently wet, spend more on a wider-track unit or a dealer-backed machine.
If your use case matches what we have described — steep, dry slopes, 1-5 acres, and you want to stay off the machine — check the current price on Amazon. If you are still deciding, confirm your soil type and typical conditions before committing. We invite you to share your own experience in the comments if you have tested this mower or a competitor. For more on remote and autonomous mowers, read our Yarbo M1 review for a comparison with autonomous alternatives.
For buyers who need to mow slopes between 30 and 60 degrees on dry ground, yes — the SYKEND lawn mower delivers that capability at a lower price than any comparable tracked remote mower from a major brand. At 4899USD, you get a 22hp engine, 35-inch cutting width, and verified 62-degree climb performance. For buyers on flat or wet terrain, the value drops significantly because a cheaper wheeled robot mower would serve you better. It is worth the price specifically for steep, dry property work.
The Yarbo M1 costs about 600 dollars more at 5499USD, is fully autonomous, and handles slopes up to 40 degrees. The SYKEND climbs steeper (62 degrees verified) but requires active remote control operation. The Yarbo is better for daily mowing on moderate terrain where you want zero operator involvement. The SYKEND wins on slope capability and raw power. Choose the Yarbo for convenience on moderate grades; choose the SYKEND for serious slope work.
We had the machine running 22 minutes after unboxing. The steps are: install a 12V battery (not included), add engine oil, add gasoline, pair the remote by pressing two buttons. The manual shows the process with diagrams. If you can change the oil in a lawn mower, you can set this up. The biggest hurdle is sourcing the 12V battery — it is a standard lawn tractor size, but you need to buy it separately. No mechanical assembly is required.
Yes. You need: a 12V lawn tractor battery (approximately 30-40 dollars), SAE 10W-30 engine oil (approximately 10 dollars), and 92-octane gasoline. The product does not include a battery or oil. We also recommend buying a spare blade set and air filter upfront, since parts take 1-2 weeks to ship from China if ordered later. Budget about 100 dollars in accessories on top of the purchase price.
The machine comes with a 1-year limited warranty covering the engine and cutting motor. You contact SYKEND directly, and if the claim is approved, you ship the defective part back at your cost. Response times average 24-48 hours, and parts fulfillment takes 7-14 days. There are no local service centers. For issues like a dead engine or failed cutting motor, expect two to three weeks total turnaround. For minor issues like loose bolts or belt tension, the manual covers DIY fixes.
Our recommendation is this authorized retailer on Amazon. SYKEND uses Amazon as their primary fulfillment channel in the US. Buying from Amazon gives you the fastest shipping, a 30-day return window, and Amazon A-to-Z claim protection if the product is defective. Prices on Amazon fluctuate seasonally, so check the listing for any coupon or discount before purchasing.
It handles wet grass but with two caveats. First, wet clippings clump under the deck faster, requiring a mid-session cleaning if you are mowing more than an acre. We stopped every 45 minutes to hose the deck. Second, the 65-degree slope rating drops to about 45 degrees on wet grass due to reduced track traction. If you must mow wet slopes, reduce the angle and mow across the grade rather than straight up and down. For flat wet areas, the machine performs fine but leaves minor track imprints on saturated soil.
SYKEND sells direct replacement blades that match the originals in thickness (0.25 inches) and alloy composition (carbon steel with a hardened edge). They cost approximately 35 dollars per set. In our testing, the original blades lasted about 20 hours before the edge dulled noticeably on brush cutting. For grass-only use, expect 30-40 hours per set. We recommend replacing blades at 25-hour intervals if you are cutting brush, and 40 hours for grass. Run them longer and you will see frayed cut edges and increased fuel consumption from the engine working harder.
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