Electric lawn mower types
Cutting your lawn correctly can make a huge difference
to how healthy it looks and how envious your neighbours are. To do this
you need to choose the correct type of lawn mower for your size and
shape garden. In this article we look at petrol lawn mower's, electric
lawn mowers in both cylinder lawn mower and rotary lawn mower types.
We shall also discuss hover mowers to see whether they really are a
lot less bother.
Petrol Lawn Mowers
The key advantage of a petrol lawn mower is obvious and that is that
it has no cable. Wow the things you learn on the internet? The end.
No, there's more. Generally speaking this is a big issue for people
with large gardens who do not happen to have a few hundred metres of
extension cable to drag back and forth (add infinitum) across their
lawn. The other added bonus is that you do not have to replace this
cable every 6 months after shredding it with your lawn mower. Another
advantage is that they are powerful. If you have an area that occasionally
gets out of hand or perhaps a meadow type area, then a petrol mower
will usually breeze through the job (although as a young lad I remember
lifting the front end of my petrol rotary lawn mower up and bringing
it slowly down on the twitch in my next door neighbours garden else
it would stall the lawn mower engine - now that garden got out of hand!)
There are disadvantages though. First is price in that a basic petrol
lawn mower will set you back £100. A better model, say a Mountfield
SP530 Self Propelled 53cm Petrol Rotary Mower will cost about £280.
Another disadvantage for me, and remember I am quite a sensitive chap,
is the noise they make. I have enough noise in the house with the wife
and kids running around screaming let alone a 4hp engine 1 metre from
my ears. I suppose I could wear ear defenders - and maybe try them on
when I cut the lawn as well.
Electric Lawn Mowers
The key advantage of an electric lawn mower for most people will be
the price. A basic rotary electric lawn mower will cost you about half
the price of a rotary petrol lawn mower, so say about £40-50.
They are generally quieter and lighter to use and need less maintenance
than a petrol lawn mower.
The key area they lack in, apart from the previously mentioned tether
to the national grid, is power. A basic petrol lawn mower is at least
3hp whilst an electric lawn mower is a at 1.5hp ( electric lawn mower
engines are rated in watts where 1hp = 746 watts) going up to about
2 hp. Does it make a difference to the lawn cutting? Again depends on
the size of the lawn, how regularly you cut it and the type of grass.
In a small to medium garden you shouldn't have any problems with a standard
electric lawn mower you would get from the DIY store. If you have a
bigger garden then the cable won't stretch and you have to buy a petrol
mower. So, its not a problem really then? (OR you could drag a petrol
generator around the garden to plug the electric mower into?!)
Cylinder lawn mowers
A good cylinder lawn mower is the best type of lawn mower that you can
buy to cut your lawn with. End of story really, as rotary can't compete.
A good analogy is that a cylinder lawn mower is like having your hair
cut at a hairdressers and a rotary mower is like having it clipped using
a home barber kit. In case you don't know what a cylinder mower is,
its like one of the old style mowers that folks used to have to push
around before the invention of electricity and petrol. As the lawn mower
goes forward, either pushed by you or under its own propulsion, a horizontally
mounted cylinder rotates with a series of cutting blades on its surface
trimming the grass to the desired height. The disadvantage is the cost.
Whilst you can buy a push cylinder mower for less than £40, it
is hard work. A basic electric cylinder mower will cost you closer £80
which will get you a grass collecting box and a roller behind the cutting
blade, which should give you the stripes on your lawn you have always
desired. Something a little bit more refined such as the classic Suffolk
Punch will set you back over £350. But for that you get a piece
of lawn mowing history and a 3 year parts warranty. OK, so your not
bothered about the history bit, well its a good lawn mower.
Rotary lawn mowers
A rotary lawn mower cuts the grass using a rotating blade (I kid you
not). This hacks the grass down and leaves a torn finish to the grass
blade.
Need that striped finish on your lawn, then you don't have to have
a cylinder lawn mower to do it, a rotary lawn mower will do a good a
job as long as it has a roller on the back. Rotary lawn mowers will
give you a tidy finish that looks respectable and have the advantage
that it will still easily cut your grass after the winter break when
its a little too long. There are also available for less money than
cylinder mowers, in both petrol and electric versions.
Hover mowers
The basic cutting method for a hover lawn mower is the same as for a
rotary lawn mower the difference here is in the design of the skirt
that surrounds the cutting blade. The rotation of the blades creates
a down draft and the escaping air lifts the whole of the lawn mower
off the grass surface so that it floats a few cm above it. This can
mean that it is very easy to push around the garden and, providing that
you are not interested in getting stripes, means that you can mow the
lawn from side to side if you wish. I currently own a hover mower, sold
by Flymo in this case, and am very happy with it. It suits my medium
size garden, is quiet, collects the grass, is easy to clean and empty
and didn't cost that much (about £90 I think a few years ago).
Hover mowers without any means of grass collection are very cheap starting
from as little as £20!
Scythe
This was how large country estates used to maintain their newly fashionable
lawns that Capability Brown was laying (although not personally I suspect).
Advantages with a scythe are that you can scare the daylights out of
the neighbours by dressing up as the Grim Reaper whilst you cut the
lawn. Disadvantages include cutting your legs off and having armed response
units telling you to 'drop the weapon.
Buy Lawn Mowers Online
You can buy lawn mowers from any decent home and garden centre on the
high street. However you can often get much better deals if you buy
lawn mowers online. One such place is Greenfingers who supply a range
of quality gardening tools (including lawn mowers) at very respectable
prices.
You can also purchase lawn mowers online at Screwfix including a rather
fun looking tractor mower!