YOU started itLoL! I might try that later.
YOU started itLoL! I might try that later.
The vibrations can get too intense and make me go tingly for ages after a serious session.
Be very, very careful. Permanent injury awaits. Buy some decent gloves to prevent this.
Be very, very careful. Permanent injury awaits. Buy some decent gloves to prevent this.
I have. And goggles.
The vibrations can get too intense and make me go tingly for ages after a serious session.
I'm not sure that Tiger's wife's front garden has gone so far as to need anything *that* big, Tony.
I bought a cordless Bosch
Draadloze Bosch. He was a bit younger. Crap painter, but bloody good at DIY work.Hieronymus' less tethered brother?
On the other hand I used a Husqvana (petrol model) at our community farm and it was fantastic - never jammed - always fed correctly, and a piece of cake to reload without having to buy disposable cartridges.
Unfortunately I think the husqvana might be rather pricey - but if you have the cash it's worth it for the lack of aggro.
the Husqvarna lawnmower I have used is a stonker.
Maybe these days. However I remember a Stihl brushcutter from the 80s, it was a pig, bought new. Even fresh from a pro service it was hard work to start, you had to get everything absolutely right. If your fuel was more than a week old, forget it. Misjudge the choke, forget it. Think you can just give it a few tugs with the choke off and the throttle wide open to clear any flooding? Yeah, good luck. My dad and I spent bloody hours and no small amount of money keeping that thing sweet, it was always serviced and never left full of fuel to evaporate and gum up the carb (look, we're not fools), yada yada. Nobody was sorry when it eventually wore out and the service guy pronounced it dead. I wouldn't have another like that as a gift.Yep, mine too. Honda engine. Stick with Stihl or Husq and you can’t really go wrong.