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Quoted: Big fan of EGO. Have several of their tools, including a string trimmer. Great stuff. View Quote This, EGO makes great stuff. Their blower is fantastic and you have a bunch to choose from, so is their hedge trimmer with the cf shaft. That's all I have from them because my lawn guy does the rest (he doesn't trim bushes, if push him to do it he charges too much.) |
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The ego 56V is hands down the best. I have had mine for going on 9 years now. Original battery is still going too. The stihl 36V stuff is garbage.
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If you have No Ethanol gas available in your area, stick with a 2 cycle weed eater. Echo 2 cycle engines are easier to pull start than other brands. Go big or stay at home. Another tip is run 2 cycle engines full throttle as it keeps them from carbonating up. Since I switched to no ethanol gas I haven’t had any problems with the carburetor fowling up.
So sum it up, Echo brand, big engine, no ethanol gas, run full speed, straight shaft, and auto feed trimmer head. Or you can do like I do, use mulch around the tree, leave the root flare on the tree exposed, and control the remaining weeds with Round-up. I only bust out the weed eater once a year. |
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Get a. ATLAS with the 80V battery. You will not regret it. In fact all the atlas tools run off my one battety HARBOR FREIGHT is your friend on this one.
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I have a 40v Ryobi and an 18v Fuel Milwaukee. The Milwaukee runs circles around the Ryobi.
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I bought a 40V Hart on sale at Wally World three years ago. Had no problems with it until I burned it up this year with first edging.
I have since bought a few M18 Fuel tools and plan to grab their trimmer. |
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Quoted: Depending on your trees and landscaping, but no way would I tackle that much acreage with a battery unit. Besides, gas units are way cheaper. View Quote Indeed. My Husqvarna 525L has probably over a thousand hours on it and continues to get going — probably paid a little over $300 for it. 2-stroke trimmers also weigh less than battery equivalents. |
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Quoted: I've got a DeWalt drill and impact driver. And some old Ryobi impact drivers. That's it. View Quote Then get a DeWalt whacker and blower from Ace for $200 as posted in post #14. https://www.acehardware.com/departments/lawn-and-garden/outdoor-power-equipment/trimmers-and-edgers/7025981 Fucking no-brainer. Brushles blower, 4.0AH battery, charger, string trimmer that is compatible with what you already own for that price. -OR- there's always that Ego brand that I keep seeing here but had never heard of in real life. |
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Quoted: Depending on your trees and landscaping, but no way would I tackle that much acreage with a battery unit. Besides, gas units are way cheaper. View Quote When you get above the normal lot for a house, gas is the only way. OP I have 1.5 acres with a lot of fence line and I can tell you there is no way I would do my yard with the size of some of the weed growths and use a battery weedeater. I could use one to maintain the driveway and sidewalk, but that is it. I bought an 20V Dewalt blower to use for the garage only, and when I get past the garage and down the driveway half way, I am needing another battery. Listen to @konger |
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I have a Ryobi 40 volt trimmer. It works great, but it's heavy. Took a while to get use to the balance of it.
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Quoted: 2-stroke trimmers also weigh less than battery equivalents. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: OP I have 1.5 acres with a lot of fence line and I can tell you there is no way I would do my yard with the size of some of the weed growths and use a battery weedeater. I wonder how you could better tell me how you know absolutely nothing about what you post while you're posting. |
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Correct me if Im wrong but higher volts does necessarily equal longer runtimes. Its marketing.
Volts = torque amd thus cutting power. Larger torque requires more cells. Then more runtime requires more cells. Series + parallel. 18-20v provides plenty of torque for my thick St.Augustine grass. At 18v, to get useful runtime I need the 4ah or more batteries. Bigger torque = bigger heavier battery pack. 4 acres is a lot and I would need probably 4+ 4ah battery packs depending on how much is actually being trimmed? just a few trees vs full fenceline. If fencelines, GAS. |
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Quoted: EGO. The $300 one with a carbon shaft. Runs circles around the Sthil it replaced. And I’m done before the Stihl would even be started View Quote That’s because the carb was fouled up. If a 2-stroke isn’t starting by the third pull, there is something wrong — probably ethanol related. I cannot imagine a situation where a battery trimmer runs circles around 2-stroke. Mine has been worked a bit, and it just screams for a 25cc engine. To each their own I suppose. |
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Quoted: That’s because the carb was fouled up. If a 2-stroke isn’t starting by the third pull, there is something wrong — probably ethanol related. I cannot imagine a situation where a battery trimmer runs circles around 2-stroke. Mine has been worked a bit, and it just screams for a 25cc engine. To each their own I suppose. View Quote I have an Echo that has never had ANY ethanol in it. I wonder if it will even start today, this thread makes me curious. I haven't had a need to start it since I got the battery-powered DeWalt. https://www.homedepot.com/p/ECHO-21-2-cc-Gas-2-Stroke-Straight-Shaft-String-Trimmer-SRM-225/100675439 |
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Quoted: I wonder how you could better tell me how you know absolutely nothing about what you post while you're posting. View Quote lol. The M18 trimmer weighs the same as my Husqvarna without the battery, so throw a 6.0 Ah or bigger battery on it and it weighs more. I also know a thing or two about trimmers considering I spend several hours a week running them. If electric is so awesome, how come professionals aren’t running around with them? That’s right, they do not make sense when you have to use them heavily for long periods of time. |
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I bought a Stihl 510 mower yesterday with the idea of having battery compatibility with a weed eater and an electric chain saw. I got the package that came with 2 batteries and the fast charger.
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Quoted: I have an Echo that has never had ANY ethanol in it. I wonder if it will even start today, this thread makes me curious. I haven't had a need to start it since I got the battery-powered DeWalt. https://www.homedepot.com/p/ECHO-21-2-cc-Gas-2-Stroke-Straight-Shaft-String-Trimmer-SRM-225/100675439 View Quote It’s possible. I have a beater/loaner Husqvarna 450 rancher saw that sat for over a year with fuel in it (non-ethanol), and I was totally expecting to have to put a carb on it, but the damn thing fired right up. |
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Started with an EGO blower several years ago. Happy with it, so stayed with their system for a string trimmer. Wife does 100% of the weed eating, and it is weed eating, no grass lawn here. Around the house, shop, driveway (500+') and garden. She loves it, although says it is heavier. IMO several smaller Ah batteries beats the larger capacity in the long run.
Took the plunge with a battery 16" EGO chainsaw also and haven't been disappointed. Doesn't replace a gas saw, wasn't meant to. But for 90% of the screwing around I do anymore, it works fine. Pick one of the half dozen popular brands and you'll be happy. |
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4 acres and a couple dozen trees?
Gas all day. Electric trimmers are nice for smaller lots and lighter duty work. |
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Get whatever coincides with your power tools. If you have Milwaukee drills and impacts, then get a Milwaukee trimmer. Or DeWalt. Or whatever. Or if you don't have cordless tools, look at which ecosystem you want to get into and buy that trimmer. Don't just buy the trimmer. Buy into the system.
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Very happy with my Milwaukee. I would buy any brand but ego, only because you can use the same batteries for power tools. I’m sure the ego models are nice but why limit yourself to only yard tools with the batteries?
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I have all ridgid tools so it only made sense to get the ridgid trimmer. No complaints.
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Quoted: My tiny MSA140 is a better saw than the neutered milwaukee 18v. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I bought a Stihl 510 mower yesterday with the idea of having battery compatibility with a weed eater and an electric chain saw. I got the package that came with 2 batteries and the fast charger. My tiny MSA140 is a better saw than the neutered milwaukee 18v. I was looking at the MSA 220. https://www.stihlusa.com/products/chain-saws/battery-saws/msa220cb/ Father's Day, Anniversary and birthday are all coming up. We have 5 acres that I use a Kubota on the 2-3 acres of pasture on so these tools are for trimming/ clean up. |
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Quoted: That’s because the carb was fouled up. If a 2-stroke isn’t starting by the third pull, there is something wrong — probably ethanol related. I cannot imagine a situation where a battery trimmer runs circles around 2-stroke. Mine has been worked a bit, and it just screams for a 25cc engine. To each their own I suppose. View Quote Nope. Bought brand new, never started right. I’d be over it before I started on the 2.5 acres of fence and cross fence. Everyone worked on it, never got it right. EGO all day. It takes longer to put glasses on than start the trimmer. Quicker to change a battery than fill the tank too. |
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Just operated a dewalt XR (or whatever model it is) yesterday for the first time.
Thing was very stout and capable for 1/3 acre lot but DAMN IT WAS HEAVY. I’m very impressed with the ego/evo battery powered mower. Ymmv |
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Take your wife when you buy it if she's doing the weed whacking.
Have her check length and weight so she can't complain later. |
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Quoted: EGO. The $300 one with a carbon shaft. Runs circles around the Sthil it replaced. And I’m done before the Stihl would even be started View Quote As someone with a BUNCH of EGO tools, this. If the string trimmer is the top priority (ESPECIALLY for the wife to use), get the dedicated string trimmer with the CF shaft. I have the multi head tool (allows you to swap between numerous tools, eg. String trimmer, hedge trimmer, edger, pole saw etc.). That versatility comes at the cost of excess weight. It’s fine for me, but females are going to have issues with using it for extended periods. The CF shaft version is MUCH lighter and easier to wield. |
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Do they make one that hangs like the Dyson vacuums on its own charger. I wouldn't mind something like that.
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Ryobi 40v carbon fiber shaft, attachment capable( edger, hedge trimmer ect) lots of power, quiet. Think I paid 179 on sale a month ago.
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Quoted: lol. The M18 trimmer weighs the same as my Husqvarna without the battery, so throw a 6.0 Ah or bigger battery on it and it weighs more. I also know a thing or two about trimmers considering I spend several hours a week running them. If electric is so awesome, how come professionals aren’t running around with them? That’s right, they do not make sense when you have to use them heavily for long periods of time. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I wonder how you could better tell me how you know absolutely nothing about what you post while you're posting. lol. The M18 trimmer weighs the same as my Husqvarna without the battery, so throw a 6.0 Ah or bigger battery on it and it weighs more. I also know a thing or two about trimmers considering I spend several hours a week running them. If electric is so awesome, how come professionals aren’t running around with them? That’s right, they do not make sense when you have to use them heavily for long periods of time. Professional = using for many hours a day I wouldn't use anything battery powered when it takes 30 seconds to pour more gas in vs hours charging. I'm not buying multiple batteries that cost 1/3rd the price of a new trimmer. That doesn't mean the battery version is less powerful or less reliable. |
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Quoted: Nope. Bought brand new, never started right. I’d be over it before I started on the 2.5 acres of fence and cross fence. Everyone worked on it, never got it right. EGO all day. It takes longer to put glasses on than start the trimmer. Quicker to change a battery than fill the tank too. View Quote What was it out of curiosity? I guess Husqvarna has spoiled me (all professional stuff), as they all always start by third pull and never give me shit. |
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Quoted: OP, are you already invested in battery tools? Milwaukee, DeWalt, Ryobi? If so, check out the ones that use your existing batteries. View Quote Can almost do all my trimming on a 5ah battery. 2.5 acres. |
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My Dewalt 20v XR brushless trimmer died after 5 years of light/medium use (battery is good). Replaced it with a Ryobi 40v for $159. The Ryobi is much more powerful, doesn’t wrap grass like dewalt but isn’t as comfortable to use.
The Dewalt deal at Ace looks decent. |
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Quoted: That would imply an internal battery, which would be a major no-go for me. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Do they make one that hangs like the Dyson vacuums on its own charger. I wouldn't mind something like that. That would imply an internal battery, which would be a major no-go for me. Yup. After owning numerous internal battery devices, I prefer separate batteries (especially when they can be used for numerous devices). Same goes for flashlights and headlamps and LED lanterns. No interest in internal battery units. 18650, AA, AAA, or D-cells. The same Ego batteries can power my mower, leaf blower, 18” chainsaw, snow blower, 2240Wh Nexus power station (with the 4x 10Ah batteries, and I also have 2x 7.5Ah, a 5Ah and a 2.5Ah), multi tool with string trimmer, hedge trimmer, pole saw… |
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Plenty of good choices.
I went with Dewalt 60v works very well. The selling point was the salesman told me it would work with my 20v batteries... the salesman lied. The 60 works with my other hand tools, but the 20v batteries do not work in the string trimmer. Whichever you choose, it's better than a gas trimmer for a homeowner. |
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