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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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New lawn-mower
Seems that the Bosch electric mower has emitted a few too many sparks. I
might be able to fix it, but just in case I can't I'm considering buying a petrol mower before I need to hire a combine harvester! Looking at various models, most seem to be very loud - about 96dB, so are there any less loud ones? I don't want self-propelled as the grass (about 250 sq. m) is in 5 parts and rather, er, 'complex'. The electric Bosch cuts almost right up to an edge - wall or path - and I'd like one that does the same, if petrol ones can. Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#2
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New lawn-mower
PeterC wrote
Seems that the Bosch electric mower has emitted a few too many sparks. I might be able to fix it, but just in case I can't I'm considering buying a petrol mower before I need to hire a combine harvester! You don't use a combine harvester, just a tractor based mower. Looking at various models, most seem to be very loud - about 96dB, so are there any less loud ones? I don't want self-propelled as the grass (about 250 sq. m) is in 5 parts and rather, er, 'complex'. The electric Bosch cuts almost right up to an edge - wall or path - and I'd like one that does the same, if petrol ones can. Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. |
#3
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New lawn-mower
On Fri, 3 Aug 2012 09:47:24 +0100, PeterC
wrote: Seems that the Bosch electric mower has emitted a few too many sparks. I might be able to fix it, but just in case I can't I'm considering buying a petrol mower before I need to hire a combine harvester! Looking at various models, most seem to be very loud - about 96dB, so are there any less loud ones? I don't want self-propelled as the grass (about 250 sq. m) is in 5 parts and rather, er, 'complex'. The electric Bosch cuts almost right up to an edge - wall or path - and I'd like one that does the same, if petrol ones can. Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. I have a Honda Izy - self propelled but they are available in push versions - and the documented dB is 94. It has been very reliable throughout the last ten years, but it, like all other domestic, wheeled, petrol rotary will not mow right up to the edge. Because the lack of this facility was beginning to irritate me earlier this year I contacted Honda and Hayter to ask if they were intending to rectify this shortcoming in the foreseeable future and was told that current design constraints did not allow for cutting heads to be wider than the wheel tracks. I ended up buying a good Stihl rechargeable strimmer for edging. -- rbel |
#4
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New lawn-mower
On Fri, 03 Aug 2012 18:14:50 +0100, rbel wrote:
On Fri, 3 Aug 2012 09:47:24 +0100, PeterC wrote: Seems that the Bosch electric mower has emitted a few too many sparks. I might be able to fix it, but just in case I can't I'm considering buying a petrol mower before I need to hire a combine harvester! Looking at various models, most seem to be very loud - about 96dB, so are there any less loud ones? I don't want self-propelled as the grass (about 250 sq. m) is in 5 parts and rather, er, 'complex'. The electric Bosch cuts almost right up to an edge - wall or path - and I'd like one that does the same, if petrol ones can. Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. I have a Honda Izy - self propelled but they are available in push versions - and the documented dB is 94. It has been very reliable throughout the last ten years, but it, like all other domestic, wheeled, petrol rotary will not mow right up to the edge. Because the lack of this facility was beginning to irritate me earlier this year I contacted Honda and Hayter to ask if they were intending to rectify this shortcoming in the foreseeable future and was told that current design constraints did not allow for cutting heads to be wider than the wheel tracks. I ended up buying a good Stihl rechargeable strimmer for edging. Honda could do the same as Bosch then - make the wheel track narroer than the cutter ;-) -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#5
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New lawn-mower
On 03/08/2012 09:47, PeterC wrote:
Seems that the Bosch electric mower has emitted a few too many sparks. I might be able to fix it, but just in case I can't I'm considering buying a petrol mower before I need to hire a combine harvester! Looking at various models, most seem to be very loud - about 96dB, so are there any less loud ones? Most petrol mowers with a B&S motor, concentrate much of the noise into the lower ranges of the audio spectrum, so while they are loud they are not particularly hard on the ears (or the neighbours). Far less unpleasant to work with than say a two stroke garden tool that may emit the same level of noise in dBA terms. I don't want self-propelled as the grass (about 250 sq. m) is in 5 parts and rather, er, 'complex'. The electric Bosch cuts almost right up to an edge - wall or path - and I'd like one that does the same, if petrol ones can. No reason why not... Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. Might be a tad on the small size for that area of lawn. Things to think about... for that sized mower 3.5hp will be fine for either collecting or cutting and dropping. If you want to mulch then you will need double the power to do it well. Easy height adjustment is worth having - some need you to tweak the setting on each wheel individually. Some have a leaver that does the whole deck in one hit. Something that has loads of airflow through it, and preferably a manual throttle so you can up the revs when the grass is damp and you want effective collection. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. Had my Hayter Harrier 41 for about 18 years... its had one oil change since new and that was about its only engine maintenance. Its on its third plastic undertray though (they fatigue near where the real wheels attach). Airflow not really good enough, and no throttle control on mine. So I don't think I would buy the same model again. Having said that the engine is good. Starts easily even after a winter in a cold shed etc. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#6
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New lawn-mower
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 01:52:40 +0100, John Rumm wrote:
Also don't want too big; this leads to the old problem of smaller machines lacking abilities as they are seen as 'cheap', so 40cm would be tops I guess. Might be a tad on the small size for that area of lawn. Trouble is the lawn isn't "that size", it's in bits and has bushes and other obstacles, so using a bigger mower would be very tiring. Same goes for self-propelled - it'd be a nuisance in the many tight spots. Things to think about... for that sized mower 3.5hp will be fine for either collecting or cutting and dropping. If you want to mulch then you will need double the power to do it well. Easy height adjustment is worth having - some need you to tweak the setting on each wheel individually. Some have a leaver that does the whole deck in one hit. The Bosch has been on the same setting since new: lowest acceptable for the roughest part and don't worry about the rest. Something that has loads of airflow through it, and preferably a manual throttle so you can up the revs when the grass is damp and you want effective collection. What seems to be a good make, reliable and has a reasonable warranty? Up to a sensible limit I don't mind how much I spend gulp. Had my Hayter Harrier 41 for about 18 years... its had one oil change since new and that was about its only engine maintenance. Its on its third plastic undertray though (they fatigue near where the real wheels attach). Airflow not really good enough, and no throttle control on mine. So I don't think I would buy the same model again. Having said that the engine is good. Starts easily even after a winter in a cold shed etc. I'd be happy to spend this sort of money - what do you think about this one?: http://www.justlawnmowers.co.uk/lawn.../product52.htm -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#7
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New lawn-mower
On 04/08/2012 09:22, PeterC wrote:
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 01:52:40 +0100, John Rumm wrote: Had my Hayter Harrier 41 for about 18 years... its had one oil change since new and that was about its only engine maintenance. Its on its third plastic undertray though (they fatigue near where the real wheels attach). Airflow not really good enough, and no throttle control on mine. So I don't think I would buy the same model again. Having said that the engine is good. Starts easily even after a winter in a cold shed etc. I'd be happy to spend this sort of money - what do you think about this one?: http://www.justlawnmowers.co.uk/lawn.../product52.htm Yup that looks like a good fit for your spec. Honda engines are first rate and never seem to give much difficulty (probably why the hire shops like Honda powered stuff so much). Note that they say its ideal for lawns up to "half a tennis court" in area - so about 130m^2. Depends a bit on how much actual grass is in your 250m^2 - however its probably less than a couple of km to walk if you are emptying it. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#8
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New lawn-mower
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 17:12:01 +0100, John Rumm wrote:
On 04/08/2012 09:22, PeterC wrote: On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 01:52:40 +0100, John Rumm wrote: Had my Hayter Harrier 41 for about 18 years... its had one oil change since new and that was about its only engine maintenance. Its on its third plastic undertray though (they fatigue near where the real wheels attach). Airflow not really good enough, and no throttle control on mine. So I don't think I would buy the same model again. Having said that the engine is good. Starts easily even after a winter in a cold shed etc. I'd be happy to spend this sort of money - what do you think about this one?: http://www.justlawnmowers.co.uk/lawn.../product52.htm Yup that looks like a good fit for your spec. Honda engines are first rate and never seem to give much difficulty (probably why the hire shops like Honda powered stuff so much). Note that they say its ideal for lawns up to "half a tennis court" in area - so about 130m^2. Depends a bit on how much actual grass is in your 250m^2 - however its probably less than a couple of km to walk if you are emptying it. Governing factor is the green bins. I have a heap of stuff to go in and with the wet 'Summer' there's too much every fortnight for 2 bins. I'll get the Honda. Any suggestions as to source? It's about £240 on Amazon and there are a couple of places at £285 but I know nothing about them. Machine Mart is £250. http://www.justhonda.co.uk/pages/product52.htm http://www.justlawnmowers.co.uk/lawn.../product52.htm (I think that these 2 might be related/the same). -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
#9
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New lawn-mower
On Sun, 5 Aug 2012 12:54:12 +0100, PeterC
wrote: I'll get the Honda. Any suggestions as to source? It's about £240 on Amazon and there are a couple of places at £285 but I know nothing about them. Machine Mart is £250. http://www.justhonda.co.uk/pages/product52.htm http://www.justlawnmowers.co.uk/lawn.../product52.htm (I think that these 2 might be related/the same). I have been getting all my garden kit from Radmore & Tucker in Exeter (on Frog Street) for years and they now have a web order facility - http://www.radmoretucker.co.uk/about.html They are a reputable company specialising in selling and servicing commercial and domestic gardening and arboricultural equipment with franchises from virtually all the major equipment manufacturers. -- rbel |
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