Friday, December 30, 2011

Gas Or Electric - Which Weed Trimmer is Right For the Job?

!±8± Gas Or Electric - Which Weed Trimmer is Right For the Job?

Weed trimmers are one of the more obscure-looking tools in the garden shed, but they are one of the most useful tools for giving a lawn a well manicured look. Sometimes called weedeaters, a grass trimmer is the tool of choice to speed the edging and trimming of a lawn for the residential or commercial property. It can be done by the homeowner or the entrepreneur.

Grass trimmers fall into two main categories, gas and electric. Among the electric models, there are corded trimmers and those that run on batteries. For the consumer, the choice is usually determined by use. A cord limits what can be trimmed to a distance less than the length of the electrical cord. Corded electric trimmers are lighter, quieter, and great for small yards. A battery frees the operator from the limitation of an extension cord, but limits what can be trimmed to the amount of work that can be accomplished within a 15 to 20 minute life for a battery charge. The battery models are not usually as powerful as the other types, but are okay for medium yards up to about a third of an acre.

A gas motor is heavier and requires more maintenance than electric, but it will deliver the power needed for cutting through tough vegetation or edging large yards. Among the gas models, there are four-stroke and two-stroke engines. Two-stroke engines are usually less expensive than their four-stroke counterparts, but they are also louder. Oil and gas has to be pre-mixed for fueling. Two strokes tend to release more hydrocarbons in their exhaust, but they still meet EPA guidelines and some models come with catalytic converters. A four-stroke engine will run on straight gasoline with less vibration than the two-stroke. Because they are also quite heavy, they are usually fitted with a shoulder strap. Most commercial lawn services favor four-stroke gas trimmers for their large jobs. They make light work of basic landscape maintenance contracts.

Propane weed trimmers are marketed as a more environmentally-friendly alternative to gasoline motors, but because their fuel source comes in non-refillable canisters, not only is the fuel more expensive, but the manufacturing of the canister negates some of the ecologically green advantage.

Using a weed trimmer proficiently takes a little practice and a bit of knowledge about some basic techniques. Check the manual's instructions about trimming close to concrete and wood. After a little experience, the lawn will look well-kept and professionally done. Always clean and store the weed trimmer properly to prolong its life. Clean off excess vegetation and debris. Check the string. Coil the cord, recharge the battery, or check the fuel level before storage to be sure the trimmer is ready for its next use.


Gas Or Electric - Which Weed Trimmer is Right For the Job?

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

!±8± The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

If you're like most home owners who mow their own lawns, you probably find that the first time you go to start your lawn mower in the spring, it is a lot harder to start than it is for the rest of the lawn mowing season. Maybe you get frustrated with it, forget that you aren't a teenager any more, and throw your back out giving the pull-start a furious yank. Maybe you then think to yourself  "I wish I had one of those electric start lawn mowers". If you have an electric-start lawn mower, maybe you are thinking "man, this thing has electric start and it still sounds dead. Thank god I don't have one of those manual start models."

By the time you have been trying to start your lawn mower for a few minutes, you have probably tried some with the choke on, and then maybe your "helpful" neighbor came by and told you that you probably flooded the engine. So maybe you try starting it a few times with the throttle opened up a bit and the choke off. If you have a manual-start machine, you may be contemplating your impending chiropractic bill, and wondering whether hiring the neighbor's kid to mow your lawn might not be such a bad idea after all.

So why can it be so hard to start an engine that has been sitting idle for six months? If you examined the spark plug under a microscope, you might figure out the problem. If you look at the tip of the spark plug with your naked eye, it will probably look fine, but if you replace that plug with a brand new clean dry sparkplug, you would probably find that your lawn mower will likely start in seconds.

The key to the mystery lies in something at the microscopic level the happens on the surface of the ceramic insulator of a spark plug over time in a machine that is stored outdoors. As the temperature and the relative humidity cycles, day after day, over time, micro-droplets condense on and re-evaporate from the surface of the ceramic insulator of your spark plug. Each time these micro-droplets form, they rearrange the tiny carbon particles that were deposited on your spark plug the last time you ran your engine. The growing of the droplets as they form pushes those particles together into conductive pathways that wind up providing an alternate path for electrical current (across the surface of the ceramic insulator instead of across the spark gap) when you try to start your lawn mower.

The carbon particles don't quite short things out, but they provide a path whose electrical resistance is low enough so that there is no spark, or the spark has so little energy that it won't ignite the charge in the cylinder. Once the engine starts, the heat of the burns within the calendar clears up this problem in a few minutes, so when you go to start the engine again the next week, it starts fine.

One easy solution for this initial-start problem is to replace the spark plug. Of course, if you want a cheaper solution that doesn't require a trip to the store, I have one for you, and it comes in the form of a hot flame. A propane torch works best, but if you don't happen to have one handy, a butane lighter or a gas stove burner will do. You see, there is a reason that the ceramic insulator surrounding the center electrode of your spark plug is made of the particular material it is made of. The surface properties of that material actually catalyze the burning off of carbon deposits when the ceramic gets hot enough. Of course, when your lawn mower has not yet started, nothing has yet gotten it "hot enough".

To solve this problem, remove the spark plug from your lawn mower, and get a hot clean flame ready (either a propane torch or a butane lighter, or gas burner on a stove). Holding on to the end of the spark plug that usually connects to the spark plug wire, stick the other end (the spark end) of the spark plug into the flame for a few seconds while rotating the spark plug a few times, heating the center electrode and the surrounding ceramic. It only takes a few seconds. After you take the spark plug out of the flame, take a look at the ceramic material surrounding the center electrode.

You should notice that the ceramic insulator surrounding the center electrode of your spark plug is now bright white, where before it might have been off-white or gray. Now your spark plug is as good as new. Put it back in your lawn mower, and enjoy how it roars quickly to life!


The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

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