Which Grass trimmer
I am looking for a grass trimmer for a small yard. My lot is about
100 feet by 80 feet. Should I get an electric or a gas trimmer? What is a good, reliable brand? Thanks in advance. |
Which Grass trimmer
Xref: 127.0.0.1 alt.home.lawn.garden:4419
I have a 31cc Ryobi 775r (gas)its 4 years old and has been flawless. My yard is 150x65' so not much bigger than yours. I never have used an electric one. I do use an electric leaf blower where I work and can say I dont like having to drag the cord around, snagging, accidentally unplugging trying to unsnag the cord. I have used a gas blower at a prior job liked it much better. For this reason is why I bought a gas trimmer. Power wise mine is more than sufficient, maybe too much power. I have taken off a few chunks of siding a small electric one may not cause this(not sure though). Too on mine the shaft can be rotated for edging the sidewalk & curb. There are cordless electric trimmers that may suit you. I would say for your size lot gas vs electric comes down to how comfortable you feel using a gas one, having a separate gas can for the oil/gas mixture {OH I get about 4 trimmings per tank} plus you can at times have the smell of the exhaust linger on your body (something my wife cant stand). If I was in the market for a new trimmer I would definitely check out a cordless one but corded electric would be last on the list. |
Which Grass trimmer
On Wed, 04 Jun 2003 19:33:01 -0500, QUAKEnSHAKE wrote:
I have a 31cc Ryobi 775r (gas)its 4 years old and has been flawless. My yard is 150x65' so not much bigger than yours. I never have used an electric one. I do use an electric leaf blower where I work and can say I dont like having to drag the cord around, snagging, accidentally unplugging trying to unsnag the cord. I have used a gas blower at a prior job liked it much better. For this reason is why I bought a gas trimmer. Power wise mine is more than sufficient, maybe too much power. I have taken off a few chunks of siding a small electric one may not cause this(not sure though). Too on mine the shaft can be rotated for edging the sidewalk & curb. There are cordless electric trimmers that may suit you. I would say for your size lot gas vs electric comes down to how comfortable you feel using a gas one, having a separate gas can for the oil/gas mixture {OH I get about 4 trimmings per tank} plus you can at times have the smell of the exhaust linger on your body (something my wife cant stand). If I was in the market for a new trimmer I would definitely check out a cordless one but corded electric would be last on the list. I too also have a ryobi 775r. I bought it in a pinch once when I needed a pole cutter. I was going to return it after the job but the ryobi preformed so well I ended up keeping it. I've read great reviews about the motors and how there sought out by rc plane builders and ultralight builders. I use mine now about 500 hours a year now mostly for extenion hedging, pole cutting and blade edging. I rarely use mine for string trimming, only as a back up to my echo trimmer. Over all I'd have to say that it's a very well built machine for the price and hands down the best trimmer in that price range. -- http://yard-works.netfirms.com Bellingham, Washington Georgia straits area Zone 8a usda |
Which Grass trimmer
Do the attachments work well? Especially blade edger.
On Thu, 05 Jun 2003 15:41:49 GMT, "Timothy" wrote: On Wed, 04 Jun 2003 19:33:01 -0500, QUAKEnSHAKE wrote: I have a 31cc Ryobi 775r (gas)its 4 years old and has been flawless. My yard is 150x65' so not much bigger than yours. I never have used an electric one. I do use an electric leaf blower where I work and can say I dont like having to drag the cord around, snagging, accidentally unplugging trying to unsnag the cord. I have used a gas blower at a prior job liked it much better. For this reason is why I bought a gas trimmer. Power wise mine is more than sufficient, maybe too much power. I have taken off a few chunks of siding a small electric one may not cause this(not sure though). Too on mine the shaft can be rotated for edging the sidewalk & curb. There are cordless electric trimmers that may suit you. I would say for your size lot gas vs electric comes down to how comfortable you feel using a gas one, having a separate gas can for the oil/gas mixture {OH I get about 4 trimmings per tank} plus you can at times have the smell of the exhaust linger on your body (something my wife cant stand). If I was in the market for a new trimmer I would definitely check out a cordless one but corded electric would be last on the list. I too also have a ryobi 775r. I bought it in a pinch once when I needed a pole cutter. I was going to return it after the job but the ryobi preformed so well I ended up keeping it. I've read great reviews about the motors and how there sought out by rc plane builders and ultralight builders. I use mine now about 500 hours a year now mostly for extenion hedging, pole cutting and blade edging. I rarely use mine for string trimming, only as a back up to my echo trimmer. Over all I'd have to say that it's a very well built machine for the price and hands down the best trimmer in that price range. -- http://yard-works.netfirms.com Bellingham, Washington Georgia straits area Zone 8a usda |
Which Grass trimmer
I havent used any attachments. For edging like half way down the shaft
there is a knob loosen this knob push in a button and you can rotate shaft like 90 degrees & 180 degrees (its built to do so) 90 position I use for edging. If a person was to give me that edger attachment though as a gift I would use it. :) |
Which Grass trimmer
"Mojo" wrote in message ... Do the attachments work well? Especially blade edger. I've got the saw trimmer and it works great. |
Which Grass trimmer
Ryobi gas 4-cycle trimmer, snow blower, saw, hedger and tiller.
Works great! Bought mine "refurbished" on eBay. Suggest synthetic oil (turns over easier in winter, better protection in summer). Also recommend goggles and perhaps dust mask for trimming (sucker throws up a bit of dirt). Bill "Mojo" wrote in message ... Thanks for the information. I am leaning towards a gas trimmer. The engine on the back helps balance it much better. I will swing by Home Depot and see what they have. I have heard the the batteries on the rechargeable ones need to be replaced periodically at $30 to $40 depending on make and model. Thanks again. On Wed, 4 Jun 2003 19:33:01 -0500 (CDT), (QUAKEnSHAKE) wrote: I have a 31cc Ryobi 775r (gas)its 4 years old and has been flawless. My yard is 150x65' so not much bigger than yours. I never have used an electric one. I do use an electric leaf blower where I work and can say I dont like having to drag the cord around, snagging, accidentally unplugging trying to unsnag the cord. I have used a gas blower at a prior job liked it much better. For this reason is why I bought a gas trimmer. Power wise mine is more than sufficient, maybe too much power. I have taken off a few chunks of siding a small electric one may not cause this(not sure though). Too on mine the shaft can be rotated for edging the sidewalk & curb. There are cordless electric trimmers that may suit you. I would say for your size lot gas vs electric comes down to how comfortable you feel using a gas one, having a separate gas can for the oil/gas mixture {OH I get about 4 trimmings per tank} plus you can at times have the smell of the exhaust linger on your body (something my wife cant stand). If I was in the market for a new trimmer I would definitely check out a cordless one but corded electric would be last on the list. |
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