The lead on mine was only 2 core, so no earth protection if used on other appliances.
Cheers
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So while my ICE was in for repair I have mowed my lawn twice with the 36v Ryobi. Used about half the battery capacity of the first mow but still needs another battery - mowing ability is impressive though. The issue would be the longevity of the of the chassis - all plastic and with gouges on the underside even at this early stage of its life - mows well but is not heavy duty as far as longevity would be concerned.
Well I just picked up my Masport 6hp from the repairer - noting it would idle only and not rev - pointing to a carb/gov issue - well not what happened was the key on the flywheel sheared and the flywheel moved a little changing its timing - would idle but not rev. Fuel tank apparently split at the top, and mech claims blades held on with normal bolts - if so is a manufacturing issue as blades with the bolts in the packet used.
So - my old mower still goes but time to think about an update - options are a new ICE mower, just a new engine or a battery powered version. I like the ease of the battery models but quality is expensive and you need to buy additional very expensive batteries - or maybe I just push my current mower into the ground and make a decision then - maybe battery mowers will be better.
Garry
I was looking at a Makita Mower last week when my Chinese self propelled mower stopped , last time it stopped no mower shop would even let me take it out of the ute . I rang a mobile mower repair guy & he told me to buy a new NGK spark plug & told me the part no. I decided to give that a try again & started 1st pull . I was hoping to get 5 years out of the mower & it has now made it to 7 years. I have a battery powered Makita wiper sniper that will be a year old come January but the battery or charger has died & won't charge. I am trying to work out which one because the battery only has one year warranty.
My sister bought an el cheapo Ozito cordless mower about 6 years ago, It is still going strong[bigwhistle]
Hoover Constellation
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...bd697d1751.jpg
My uncle had one
We used to do the vacuuming for him every time we went to his place
Probably just played in the exhaust air[emoji12] rather than vacuum [emoji1531][emoji1531][emoji1531][emoji1531]
At least we didn’t just play with the hose I suppose 🤣🤣
I have just purchased a Makita 21 inch self propelled battery electric mower.
Steel chassis.......well made.
Comes as package with four 5AH batteries and dual battery charger.
Cost was $1350.00.
It is replacing a Honda self drive mower I purchased 23 years ago and paid at the time $1200.00
The Makita only uses 2 batteries at a time (36 volt operation)with a switch that will swap over to the other two without stuffing around.........ie you have 20Ah to play with and 6 AH batteries will fit to give 24 AH if you are already using 6 AH batteries on some other Makita product or pay extra for bigger batteries to go with the mower.
Makita also have at extra cost a backpack battery system which holds four Makita batteries up to 6AH each plus while using this you still have another two spare ready to switch over in the mower giving up to 36 AH without changing batteries.
I was already on the Makita 18volt format so it was no brainer.
I find with the Batteries supplied with the mower
Doing front and rear lawns in one go is not a problem...but with little battery reserve left.
(I may buy 6 AH batteries at a later date)
.Makita is expensive, but works well and has the tradesman in mind.
The only down fall is out right power for wet grass catching.
I tend to motch..so not a issue.
Makita are now going over to a new higher voltage format and expect greater things, but at a price.
What I got seemed value for money with quality to last.....Makita have full on tradesman battery electric in the new format with huge batteries to run the mower though hours of hard work.
Price is the killer on the big battery tradesman models.
This sort of thing will be game changer for small acerage owners....
Ryobi 48V 42" Brushless Zero Turn Rider - Bunnings Australia
If its well made, no belts, no petrol motor. that's 95% of the problems with ride on gone. and its zero turn.