Roundybout Posted May 12 Author Posted May 12 45 minutes ago, PromoTheRobot said: I have a dual battery self-propelled Ryobi. Love it. My father has all the Ryobi tools, from weed whacker to blower. He loves them and they're easy enough for him to use in his 70s. 1 Quote
Augie Posted May 12 Posted May 12 2 hours ago, \GoBillsInDallas/ said: I’ve always wanted to work in landscape management. I would give her footwear a one time exemption. Quote
Mike in Horseheads Posted May 12 Posted May 12 13 minutes ago, Augie said: I’ve always wanted to work in landscape management. I would give her footwear a one time exemption. She looks smart enough to be careful 3 Quote
Augie Posted May 12 Posted May 12 (edited) 43 minutes ago, Mike in Horseheads said: She looks smart enough to be careful Sorry, off topic, but the thought made me chuckle: My wife’s parents were very “old country”. Other than a couple times on the golf course, and eventually in the hospital, I never saw her father not wearing a tie. English was her mother’s third language (after Arabic and French) and she spoke in a very formal way. It’s what she was taught in boarding school in Lebanon, not growing up in the Bronx. Very different. We moved to Sarasota, FL in 1993, known for Siesta Key beach. Naturally, we wanted to take my MIL to all the great things in town when she came to visit. The opera house was great, but I had to tap the brakes when the wife wanted to show her the beach. Her dad was always in a tie, and her mom was ALWAYS in high heels. I asked my wife how she saw that going, and we just cruised thru the parking lot. That girl is going to sink into the grass, but there will be no shortage of people eager to help her up. . Edited May 12 by Augie Quote
SoTier Posted May 13 Posted May 13 I have a Ryobi 20 inch battery operated mower that I bought last year to replace my 10/15 year old behemoth self propelled gas mower. Love the new little mower. I have a large lot but I use a rider on most of it. The walk behind mower is to do the front tree lawn (grassy area between the street and sidewalk), the grassy paths through the front and side yard flower beds, and to do clean up around the raised beds in the veggie garden. I can do it all on a single charge. Quote
wnyguy Posted May 13 Posted May 13 16 hours ago, Roundybout said: My father has all the Ryobi tools, from weed whacker to blower. He loves them and they're easy enough for him to use in his 70s. I have an EGO battery powered weed whacker and it is great. If their lawn mowers are as good as the weed whacker you can't go wrong. 1 Quote
Ridgewaycynic2013 Posted May 13 Posted May 13 On 5/12/2025 at 9:36 AM, Ridgewaycynic2013 said: Seeing the corded A.C. versions reminds me of my father and his Sunbeam electric hedge clipper in the 1960s. The corner lot of the Buffalo house had a privet hedge along the entire perimeter, and a great certainty of every Spring trim was either one of his fingers or the trimmer cord was going to get sliced. There was more electrical tape on the cord than in Niagara Mohawk. * As a thank you premium, a hardware chain gave a Black and Decker battery operated hedge trimmer with each lawn mower purchased. "Great!" we all said, until we found that one of these battery operated units in 1970 got you about 20 feet of hedge trimmed before it died an ignoble death, and took a good 36 hours to recharge. 🤨 As a further 'haw haw' to the hedge trimming follies, I was on cleanup duty as my father was clipping when the neighbour stopped to talk. This truck driver father and PE instructor neighbour were brainstorming an idea to set a gas mower on a frame of angle iron and just pushing the mower along to trim. Never mind that you now have a blade whirling at chest height, and no real provision to trim the sides of the hedge, it was a winner! 😳 No consideration given to assembly / disassembly time of the contraption, either. 🤨 Quote
Southern McButterpants. Posted May 13 Posted May 13 I went full EGO this year. 21" self-propelled mower, string trimmer, edger and blower. they all work super - as someone else mentioned, the mower is light as a feather. The back yard slopes considerably, so the self-propelled part is a blessing. No issues with batteries (yet). Loving it. 1 1 1 Quote
Mike in Horseheads Posted May 14 Posted May 14 10 hours ago, Southern McButterpants. said: I went full EGO this year. 21" self-propelled mower, string trimmer, edger and blower. they all work super - as someone else mentioned, the mower is light as a feather. The back yard slopes considerably, so the self-propelled part is a blessing. No issues with batteries (yet). Loving it. What did that mower run ya cost wise? Quote
Southern McButterpants. Posted Wednesday at 11:56 AM Posted Wednesday at 11:56 AM 8 hours ago, Mike in Horseheads said: What did that mower run ya cost wise? All together, just under $1000 - the mower itself was around $550. Fortunately, one of the batteries is interchangeable among the trimmer, edger and blower. Plus, I built a bad-ass looking charging station in my garage. 1 Quote
Roundybout Posted Wednesday at 12:40 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 12:40 PM On 5/12/2025 at 4:39 PM, Draconator said: I'm going to Penn State in Turfgrass Sciences (Bachelors). You can't go wrong with a reel lawn mower for a lawn size of yours. So I ended up ordering one of these things. It’s not a traditional reel mower, the blades are driven by a chain that spins the rotor faster. Plus it has all the stuff I wanted like a lever to control the height of the cut and a steel grass deflector. Itll get here Friday, looking forward to giving it a shot. 2 1 Quote
Ridgewaycynic2013 Posted Wednesday at 02:42 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:42 PM 1 hour ago, Roundybout said: So I ended up ordering one of these things. It’s not a traditional reel mower, the blades are driven by a chain that spins the rotor faster. Plus it has all the stuff I wanted like a lever to control the height of the cut and a steel grass deflector. Itll get here Friday, looking forward to giving it a shot. Fiskars is a well trusted name in limbing and trimming saws and shears. We look forward to your reports. 1 Quote
Draconator Posted Wednesday at 02:52 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:52 PM 2 hours ago, Roundybout said: So I ended up ordering one of these things. It’s not a traditional reel mower, the blades are driven by a chain that spins the rotor faster. Plus it has all the stuff I wanted like a lever to control the height of the cut and a steel grass deflector. Itll get here Friday, looking forward to giving it a shot. That looks sweet! Good choice! 1 Quote
Simon Posted Wednesday at 06:14 PM Posted Wednesday at 06:14 PM On 5/11/2025 at 4:35 PM, Roundybout said: Anyone use an electric lawn mower? I don't, but my wife does. When she's done cleaning the gutters, I'll ask her what model she got herself for her birthday. 1 Quote
Behindenemylines Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago We had a solid 1 acre of mow-able grass in Westchester and I used a 21” EGO push mower. Would take two battery charges and I had multiple batteries so quick switch was key. It even had a headlight on but so could now into the evening. Gave it to my buddy when we moved and my new yard was small so invested in the ryobi system. I liked the eGO better in general but for the money the ryobi isn’t far behind. they are both so quiet and I beat the crap out of them and never an issue since 2016 with the Ryobi. Quote
Draconator Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago On 5/14/2025 at 8:40 AM, Roundybout said: So I ended up ordering one of these things. It’s not a traditional reel mower, the blades are driven by a chain that spins the rotor faster. Plus it has all the stuff I wanted like a lever to control the height of the cut and a steel grass deflector. Itll get here Friday, looking forward to giving it a shot. Have you had a chance to use it and how was it? Quote
Doc Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago On 5/12/2025 at 4:44 PM, \GoBillsInDallas/ said: Can't wait for the picture of her trimming the bushes. Quote
Roundybout Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago 27 minutes ago, Draconator said: Have you had a chance to use it and how was it? Yes! It was tough going the first time, because my lawn was easily at six inches. That said, it handled it like a champ. I did a couple passes afterwards dropping the mower down a few levels and it was much easier. Good workout too! I am impressed that the "InertiaDrive" feature that Fiskars advertised isn't a gimmick. It genuinely felt like the blades were picking up a bunch of extra momentum that helped get through the tall grass. 1 1 Quote
Draconator Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 8 minutes ago, Roundybout said: Yes! It was tough going the first time, because my lawn was easily at six inches. That said, it handled it like a champ. I did a couple passes afterwards dropping the mower down a few levels and it was much easier. Good workout too! I am impressed that the "InertiaDrive" feature that Fiskars advertised isn't a gimmick. It genuinely felt like the blades were picking up a bunch of extra momentum that helped get through the tall grass. Glad it worked out! 1 Quote
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