I am looking to buy a battery blade strimmer. For domestic use--small garden. There are various makes to choose from. What make do you have and is it reliable?
Look forward to your answers.
Look forward to your answers.
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Mike, do you actually mean a strimmer, as you mention a blade. The blades are a fairly heavy metal plate and these are called brush cutters. They need more "oomph" than a strimmer, so bigger batteries and more expense.I am looking to buy a battery blade strimmer. For domestic use--small garden. There are various makes to choose from. What make do you have and is it reliable?
Look forward to your answers.
OMike, do you actually mean a strimmer, as you mention a blade. The blades are a fairly heavy metal plate and these are called brush cutters. They need more "oomph" than a strimmer, so bigger batteries and more expense.
Before I realised this and also accepted cutting 50 x 10 m area meant the purchase of a 4 stroke Makita, I'd narrowed my choice down to an electric Stihl.
Colin
I have a petrol stilh and a battery stilh which I bought as the wife didn’t want to bother with trying to start the petrol. Yesterday wanted to use the petrol to strim the banked verge outside my house but of course it wouldn’t start and needs a strip down.
Huge weeds and long grass - about 50 yards long. Tried the battery strimmer on it and was amazed. Did the whole job on one battery with some large patches of nettles and thistles. I’ll be getting rid of the petrol now I realise how good and how simple to use these are.
WMy Son-in-Law is a professional garden maintainer for the past ten years+and uses Stilh, strimmers and hedge trimmers. I am sure that the accountants have been at their products as they seem to have too many break-downs of small plastic pieces. This means constant trips to the repair workshops as definitely not user friendly.
I have a Kawasaki petrol strimmer that has (fingers crossed) done great service for years (without any repairs) and I don't empty the fuel tank and it starts very easily each time. One day it won't but it has paid for itself over and over. I am afraid the "race to the bottom" has reduced even the "Big Boys" to less robust work tools but their prices don't reflect this.
That Screwfix strimmer gets excellent reviews, and from what reviewers say, the auto-feed system seems to work really well. (I have a Qualcast mains powered strimmer, which is really unusable as the auto-feed is pathetic). Does the spool on the Screwfix Titan strimmer have to be rewound with new cord, or is the cassette simply replaced with a new full spool?I actually just bought a battery one myself last week.
https://www.screwfix.com/p/titan-tti821ggt-18v-1-x-2-0ah-li-ion-txp-cordless-grass-trimmer/380pt
I had been reluctant to go this route but petrol was a no for me and so much to deal with at the allotment that something had to be bought.
It worked well on its first couple of runs! I’m not expecting top end quality but it’s quick to set up, packs down small, light to use.
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