Posted by Abertech on June 26, 2008, 4:28 am
Hi,
I've moved to a place with a lawn of about 20 x 15 feet and another
smaller lawn elsewhere. I think thats too much for my cordless
strimmer to cope with so I'm looking at getting a lawnmower.
I was thinking of picking up a cheap hand powered cylinder mower from
Argos. The lawn is flat but far from immaculate, having a couple of
weeds, bumps and occassional twigs etc in amongst the grass. Would a
hand powered mower be ok for this or are they meant for immaculately
kept lawns?
I've had a hover mower in the past but I like the idea of no power
cables, simplicity etc.
TIA.
Posted by Philippe Gautier on June 26, 2008, 5:47 am
Abertech wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've moved to a place with a lawn of about 20 x 15 feet and another
> smaller lawn elsewhere. I think thats too much for my cordless
> strimmer to cope with so I'm looking at getting a lawnmower.
>
> I was thinking of picking up a cheap hand powered cylinder mower from
> Argos. The lawn is flat but far from immaculate, having a couple of
> weeds, bumps and occassional twigs etc in amongst the grass. Would a
> hand powered mower be ok for this or are they meant for immaculately
> kept lawns?
>
> I've had a hover mower in the past but I like the idea of no power
> cables, simplicity etc.
>
> TIA.
I've used a hand power mower for years on my small lawn (and actually
just replace my old one with the Argos one you're talking about). It
does not cope terribly well with bumps (but I guess it depends what you
call bumps!) or high grass height, especially if it's wet. I don't see
why weeds would be a problem and twigs are a no-no (they get stuck
between the blades). So, maybe if you get rid of twigs and the bumps you
are talking about are not too big and you mow your lawn regularly....
Philippe
Posted by Paul Luton on June 26, 2008, 4:59 pm
Philippe Gautier wrote:
> Abertech wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've moved to a place with a lawn of about 20 x 15 feet and another
>> smaller lawn elsewhere. I think thats too much for my cordless
>> strimmer to cope with so I'm looking at getting a lawnmower.
>>
>> I was thinking of picking up a cheap hand powered cylinder mower from
>> Argos. The lawn is flat but far from immaculate, having a couple of
>> weeds, bumps and occassional twigs etc in amongst the grass. Would a
>> hand powered mower be ok for this or are they meant for immaculately
>> kept lawns?
>> TIA.
>
> I've used a hand power mower for years on my small lawn (and actually
> just replace my old one with the Argos one you're talking about). It
> does not cope terribly well with bumps (but I guess it depends what you
> call bumps!) or high grass height, especially if it's wet. I don't see
> why weeds would be a problem and twigs are a no-no (they get stuck
> between the blades). So, maybe if you get rid of twigs and the bumps you
> are talking about are not too big and you mow your lawn regularly....
>
> Philippe
Agree that hand mowers don't like wet grass but twigs - just reverse,
remove twig, carry on. Weeds no problem
Paul
--
CTC Right to Ride Rep. for Richmond upon Thames
Posted by James Tiller on July 10, 2008, 9:01 am
If you want a chordless mower for a small lawn, I would reccommend a
battery powered mower. These have in the past been badly under powered
and the running time has been far to short.
Bosch have recently brought out two new Rotak mowers which use Lithium
ion batteries that are excellent.
I would strongly reccommend these two mowers, they would make much
lighter work than a hand powered mower and they can comfortably deal
with twigs and uneven ground.
I found a great website, www.turfshop.co.uk, that has some great deals
on mowers including the two Li-ion battery powered mowers.
--
James Tiller
Posted by Eddy on June 26, 2008, 12:19 pm
Abertech wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've moved to a place with a lawn of about 20 x 15 feet and another
> smaller lawn elsewhere. I think thats too much for my cordless
> strimmer to cope with so I'm looking at getting a lawnmower.
>
> I was thinking of picking up a cheap hand powered cylinder mower from
> Argos. The lawn is flat but far from immaculate, having a couple of
> weeds, bumps and occassional twigs etc in amongst the grass. Would a
> hand powered mower be ok for this or are they meant for immaculately
> kept lawns?
>
> I've had a hover mower in the past but I like the idea of no power
> cables, simplicity etc.
>
> TIA.
Focus doing a small electric lawn-mower in the Champion range for under
£100 and you can rely on them for replacement blades in years to come.
This is what we have used on a much larger set of lawns with all sorts
of sloping parts. I thought the handle wouldn't stand up to the strain
placed upon it and the plastic chassis while doing sloping parts but it
has behaved extremely well and is still going strong. If your lawns are
flat then the cable shouldn't prove too much of an annoyance -
particularly if you can get someone else to manipulate it while you just
go up and down with the mower :-).
Eddy.
>
> I've moved to a place with a lawn of about 20 x 15 feet and another
> smaller lawn elsewhere. I think thats too much for my cordless
> strimmer to cope with so I'm looking at getting a lawnmower.
>
> I was thinking of picking up a cheap hand powered cylinder mower from
> Argos. The lawn is flat but far from immaculate, having a couple of
> weeds, bumps and occassional twigs etc in amongst the grass. Would a
> hand powered mower be ok for this or are they meant for immaculately
> kept lawns?
>
> I've had a hover mower in the past but I like the idea of no power
> cables, simplicity etc.
>
> TIA.