Dear Jim: I really don’t like cutting grass, so I am thinking about a rechargeable automatic robot mower or a quiet, no-fumes cordless mower. What is the best type to get and will my electric bills be higher? – Bob H.
Dear Bob: There are several designs of automatic robot mowers that cut your lawn while you relax on your deck. The prices of some robot models have dropped to only about $100 more than walk-behind gasoline mowers.
I use a rechargeable cordless mower in my 1/3-acre backyard.
There are no exhaust fumes, it always starts and it is quiet. The first time I used it, it was so quiet, my neighbors wondered why I was pushing a mower around without starting it. I can talk on my cell phone while I mow.
Depending on how often you mow, a cordless or robot mower uses only $10 to $20 of electricity per year. When you compare this to typical gasoline mower operating costs (gas, tune-ups, oil changes), using a cordless mower is a bargain.
Also, they don’t pollute the air nearly as much.
Automatic robot mowers work similar to an invisible fence for a dog.
You lay a low-voltage wire, attached with tiny stakes, on the ground around the perimeter of your yard. When the robot mower gets to the wire, it senses the wire and turns 45 degrees. It continues this pattern until your entire yard is cut.
There is a pressure-sensitive bumper around the edge of the robot mower. When it bumps an object, such as a tree, house wall or deck post, the bumper signals it to change direction.
One can cut a third to a half-acre lawn on each recharge. They operate extremely quietly and are durable.
A self-charging robot mower senses when the battery charge is low and it finds its recharging station. There it connects itself and starts cutting again after the battery is recharged.
With a nonself-charging model, when the lawn is completely cut, you steer it with a controller to any electrical wall outlet and plug it in to recharge.
The best walk-behind cordless mowers use a 24-volt battery.
This is a good compromise between cutting time and weight.
In all but the thickest growth period in early spring, I do my entire yard on one charge. It recharges to 70 percent power in four hours or fully in 24 hours.
If you are not quite ready for a robot mower, but want a self-propelled one, select a gasoline mower with an overhead valve (OHV) engine. OHV’s produce less air pollution and are powerful.
The most convenient self-propelled mowers use an automatic variable-speed design to move at any pace you walk.
If you start walking faster than the mower, this puts pressure on the handle and the mower speeds up.
Write for (instantly download – www.dulley.com) UpdateBulletin No. 845 – buyer’s guide of 10 rechargeable, gasoline and robot mower manufacturers listing speeds, engine type, horsepower, cutting width/height, weight, and mulching mowing tips. Include $3 and a business-size SASE, and send to James Dulley, 6906 Royalgreen Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45244.
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