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Sandgroper 07-05-2006 10:10 AM

whipper snipper
 
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.



Jonno 07-05-2006 12:34 PM

whipper snipper
 
Sandgroper wrote:
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.



Wrong size or cheap line? Snipping too close to the head (should be the
length of the line about 4/6 inches)
See your local Husqvarna dealers and ask They will know what is the best
line for your model.
Remeber its not a mower and also use a face gaurd...

GOW 07-05-2006 12:47 PM

whipper snipper
 
I have a Husky as well and hate it!
Appart that it is a mongral to start; the line seams to bind together in the
head and the smooth edged line seams worse than the star shaped stuff from
BigW.
Buy thicker line (than recomended from BigDub and shave down the lead in so
that you can wind it onto the spool.
Don't put too much on the spool, a loosely wound half is about right, you
are better off with half the amount that you can use than a heap that gets
bound up and breaks.

Next time I save the money and buy a cheapie from BigW.

Cheers
WoW

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana
whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.





David Hare-Scott 07-05-2006 01:42 PM

whipper snipper
 

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana

whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.



Crappy line, I had the same problem with my Honda, brand A works fine, brand
B always breaks at the head in about 30 seconds.

David



Sandgroper 07-05-2006 04:43 PM

whipper snipper
 
Thanks for the info ppl. Between u and me, he is inclined to buy the
cheapest so maybe I'll just buy better and thicker line and advise him to
shave it down and wind loosely.
Thanks again.



g len 07-05-2006 10:28 PM

whipper snipper
 
g'day sandgroper,

the most common cause is users forcing the head too close, practise is
needed to only use the tip of the nylon to do the actual cutting, once
learnt the operator will be able to complete the task with minimum line
usage.

the other cause is if the head is an old one and the thimbles are badly
grooved, on my machine i can rotate the thimbles to share the wear.

using too light a line will give rapid wear rater, using too heavy a line
will over load the machine.

there is an art in using these machines to the best of their ability. i'm
also no fan of tap-n-go heads they are very wasteful of line and prone to
break-downs and wear from hard contact with the ground, my current manualy
operated head is on it's second machine, and if need be will do another
machine.

practise to get the tip of the nylon doing the work.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://mywebsite.bigpond.com/gardenlen2/
"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana

whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.





g len 07-05-2006 10:35 PM

whipper snipper
 
g'day dow,

the husky shouldn't be givng problems they are one of the better brands,
might come back to who tunes it for you? dunno.

if you have problems with line welding together in the head moisten it with
wd-40 or similar before spooling it on, also welding can happen when using
line to cut grass that is too heavy or when other attachement should be
used. but again if you parctise getting the tip of the nylon to cut you can
cut heavy grass be it slowly.

i buy medium priced nylon and always the recommended thickness for the
machine.

true never overload the spool, and try to wind it on as evenly as possible
when loading the spool.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

snipped



g len 07-05-2006 10:40 PM

whipper snipper
 
g'day sandgroper,

there is an optimum line thickness rated to the cc capacity of the machine
eg.,. i have a 27cc machine so the best line for me is 2.4 to 2.5mm
thickness, with manual heads the cutting length is determined when each tail
reaches the adjacant thimble, tap-n-go heads are self determining.

my experience i can as good or better performance from medium quality nylon
as what i can from the dearer dancy ones. a lot will still come back to
operator finesse.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."
snipped



godwin 08-05-2006 04:00 AM

Much over rated tool. But I always use a metal disc head (brushcutter)

Sandgroper 08-05-2006 04:21 AM

whipper snipper
 
thanks for all your advice len. i'll check out the cc capacity of machine. i
think it's a tap and go head? but you mentioning the tip of the line cutting
is what i think hubby needs to practice. he bought the machine about 10
years ago and i didn't know we could get other attachments! it's done very
few hours work! thanks for all the time you've spent helping. much
appreciated.

"g len" wrote in message
...
g'day sandgroper,

the most common cause is users forcing the head too close, practise is
needed to only use the tip of the nylon to do the actual cutting, once
learnt the operator will be able to complete the task with minimum line
usage.

the other cause is if the head is an old one and the thimbles are badly
grooved, on my machine i can rotate the thimbles to share the wear.

using too light a line will give rapid wear rater, using too heavy a line
will over load the machine.

there is an art in using these machines to the best of their ability. i'm
also no fan of tap-n-go heads they are very wasteful of line and prone to
break-downs and wear from hard contact with the ground, my current manualy
operated head is on it's second machine, and if need be will do another
machine.

practise to get the tip of the nylon doing the work.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://mywebsite.bigpond.com/gardenlen2/
"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana

whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use

from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.







Geoff & Heather 08-05-2006 01:09 PM

whipper snipper
 
The best line I have found is the bulk "professional" line from Bunnings.
Comes in a limited ranges of sizes and colour coding is not the same
standard you normally find - you have to read the size labels. If you have
a large area like mine (about 1 hour to do all the edges) then a $70 roll is
worth it. Where as I used to take two refills of KMart cord to do the lot,
I get it done with less than one of the Bunnings stuff - and just over one
of the Husky line.

Cheers,
Geoff

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
thanks for all your advice len. i'll check out the cc capacity of machine.
i
think it's a tap and go head? but you mentioning the tip of the line
cutting
is what i think hubby needs to practice. he bought the machine about 10
years ago and i didn't know we could get other attachments! it's done very
few hours work! thanks for all the time you've spent helping. much
appreciated.

"g len" wrote in message
...
g'day sandgroper,

the most common cause is users forcing the head too close, practise is
needed to only use the tip of the nylon to do the actual cutting, once
learnt the operator will be able to complete the task with minimum line
usage.

the other cause is if the head is an old one and the thimbles are badly
grooved, on my machine i can rotate the thimbles to share the wear.

using too light a line will give rapid wear rater, using too heavy a line
will over load the machine.

there is an art in using these machines to the best of their ability. i'm
also no fan of tap-n-go heads they are very wasteful of line and prone to
break-downs and wear from hard contact with the ground, my current
manualy
operated head is on it's second machine, and if need be will do another
machine.

practise to get the tip of the nylon doing the work.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://mywebsite.bigpond.com/gardenlen2/
"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana

whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use

from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.









Jock 08-05-2006 01:13 PM

whipper snipper
 
I have the Husky 125L and use 2.5 mm line. (red).
Use it long and don't let it get less that 50mm in length.
Thicker line fractures in the feed hole if you get too close to bricks,
rocks & stuff. Just remember to keep it long and fast. Thinner line
disappears too fast as well.
Jock

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
| Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana
whipper
| snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use from
| it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
| Appreciate any advice.
|
|



Sandgroper 08-05-2006 04:13 PM

whipper snipper
 
thanks Geoff... i'm relaying all this info to the dear hubby.

"Geoff & Heather" wrote in message
u...
The best line I have found is the bulk "professional" line from Bunnings.
Comes in a limited ranges of sizes and colour coding is not the same
standard you normally find - you have to read the size labels. If you

have
a large area like mine (about 1 hour to do all the edges) then a $70 roll

is
worth it. Where as I used to take two refills of KMart cord to do the

lot,
I get it done with less than one of the Bunnings stuff - and just over one
of the Husky line.

Cheers,
Geoff

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
thanks for all your advice len. i'll check out the cc capacity of

machine.
i
think it's a tap and go head? but you mentioning the tip of the line
cutting
is what i think hubby needs to practice. he bought the machine about 10
years ago and i didn't know we could get other attachments! it's done

very
few hours work! thanks for all the time you've spent helping. much
appreciated.

"g len" wrote in message
...
g'day sandgroper,

the most common cause is users forcing the head too close, practise is
needed to only use the tip of the nylon to do the actual cutting, once
learnt the operator will be able to complete the task with minimum line
usage.

the other cause is if the head is an old one and the thimbles are badly
grooved, on my machine i can rotate the thimbles to share the wear.

using too light a line will give rapid wear rater, using too heavy a

line
will over load the machine.

there is an art in using these machines to the best of their ability.

i'm
also no fan of tap-n-go heads they are very wasteful of line and prone

to
break-downs and wear from hard contact with the ground, my current
manualy
operated head is on it's second machine, and if need be will do another
machine.

practise to get the tip of the nylon doing the work.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://mywebsite.bigpond.com/gardenlen2/
"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana
whipper
snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use

from
it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.











Sandgroper 08-05-2006 04:15 PM

whipper snipper
 
Thanks for your reply Jock.

"Jock" wrote in message
...
I have the Husky 125L and use 2.5 mm line. (red).
Use it long and don't let it get less that 50mm in length.
Thicker line fractures in the feed hole if you get too close to bricks,
rocks & stuff. Just remember to keep it long and fast. Thinner line
disappears too fast as well.
Jock

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...
| Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana
whipper
| snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use

from
| it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
| Appreciate any advice.
|
|





Jonno 08-05-2006 05:37 PM

whipper snipper
 
Sandgroper wrote:
thanks Geoff... i'm relaying all this info to the dear hubby.

"Geoff & Heather" wrote in message
u...

The best line I have found is the bulk "professional" line from Bunnings.
Comes in a limited ranges of sizes and colour coding is not the same
standard you normally find - you have to read the size labels. If you

have

a large area like mine (about 1 hour to do all the edges) then a $70 roll

is

worth it. Where as I used to take two refills of KMart cord to do the

lot,

I get it done with less than one of the Bunnings stuff - and just over one
of the Husky line.

Cheers,
Geoff

"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...

thanks for all your advice len. i'll check out the cc capacity of

machine.

i
think it's a tap and go head? but you mentioning the tip of the line
cutting
is what i think hubby needs to practice. he bought the machine about 10
years ago and i didn't know we could get other attachments! it's done

very

few hours work! thanks for all the time you've spent helping. much
appreciated.

"g len" wrote in message
...

g'day sandgroper,

the most common cause is users forcing the head too close, practise is
needed to only use the tip of the nylon to do the actual cutting, once
learnt the operator will be able to complete the task with minimum line
usage.

the other cause is if the head is an old one and the thimbles are badly
grooved, on my machine i can rotate the thimbles to share the wear.

using too light a line will give rapid wear rater, using too heavy a

line

will over load the machine.

there is an art in using these machines to the best of their ability.

i'm

also no fan of tap-n-go heads they are very wasteful of line and prone

to

break-downs and wear from hard contact with the ground, my current
manualy
operated head is on it's second machine, and if need be will do another
machine.

practise to get the tip of the nylon doing the work.

--
With peace and brightest of blessings,

len

--
"Be Content With What You Have And
May You Find Serenity and Tranquillity In
A World That You May Not Understand."

http://mywebsite.bigpond.com/gardenlen2/
"Sandgroper" wrote in message
...

Can anyone tell me what (my husband's) doing wrong with his Husqvana

whipper

snipper. The line is forever breaking. I'm sure he could get more use

from

it, but until then, he's doing lawn edges with handshears!!!
Appreciate any advice.









Oh oh Dear hubby He who must obey..


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