Battery Powered Week Whacker

   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #1  

RichZ

Veteran Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2001
Messages
1,873
Location
White Creek, New York, Washington County, on the V
Tractor
Kubota 4630 with cab and loader
I'd like to get a battery powered weed whacker. Does anyone have any they would recommend or any that I should stay away from?

Thanks!!!!
 
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   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #2  
Mine is the Worx brand that takes 2 20volt batteries. It is light weight, well balanced, quiet and has a button to press to advance the trimmer line.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #3  
I have read good things about the Worx brand of mowers, I almost bought one. Then I started reading about the headaches in getting them fixed if something went wrong. My neighbor has a Black and Decker WW he likes, but doesn't seem to have a long run time. Then again, he is 93 and doesn't need/want a long run time.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #4  
I have an Echo weed whacker and chainsaw;like them both.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #5  
The Wife bought herself a Worx cordless lawn mower with grass catcher bag 2 years ago. Drawback is it only has a 17" cut but it is super-quiet and really lightweight and easy to push. Our lawn is approximately 5,000 square ft and we normally make it thru on charged batteries. If we waited to long between mowings, we may need to swap in another set of batteries to finish.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #7  
Id like to wack last week
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #8  
I have Oregon, started with the chainsaw, then the pole saw, blower, hedge trimmer & string trimmer. All good tools, I had an oil leak in the chain saw, fixed under warranty, had to replace the switch on the blower & the trimmer winds up with tall grass, but good for yard use.

I also have a Core brand, which I think was bought out by MTD & sold as Cub Cadet. I never liked the feel of it compared to the Oregon.

If I were to start over, I'd probably go with Stihl, mostly due to the local dealer!
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #9  
Here's a very good weed wacker IMO Echo CDST-58V2AH 58V Cordless String Trimmer w/ 2Ah Battery and Charger ($269.)

I don't know if it would whack the week ? I have had some tough one's in my time , weeks that is ! :laughing:

:thumbsup:

I bought the same weed trimmer, due to my wife having trouble starting the gas ones. It has good run time between charges, which is good. I priced an extra battery in case I wanted to rotate them for longer work time..... amazingly it would cost more than I gave for the whole outfit. I hope the price starts coming down a bit with economy of scale as they gain popularity.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #10  
For the past 6 or 7 years the wife has been getting me Worx cordless tools for Christmas. I have enough batteries on hand to wear my butt out on any tool I choose. Makita is still my choice for cordless drill/drivers.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #11  
Bought the Dewalt 20v (bare tool) string trimmer. Have around 8 batteries for tool collection. They may have a 60v version.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #12  
So far I'm really liking my 20V brushless DeWalt. Only in my first season so time will tell if it holds up. It seems every bit as strong as my old ST275 Homelite was and starts first time every time. Actually so did the Homelite for 30+ years but I finally needed a part for it that was NLA. The shorter string and reverse rotation took some time to adjust to and I would still prefer if it turned clockwise.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #13  
I'd like to get a battery powered weed whacker. Does anyone have any they would recommend or any that I should stay away from?

Thanks!!!!

I have 2 Milwaukee M18 weed wackers. Work great as does the rest of the M18 outdoor products. The 9AH & 12AH batteries are not just higher capacity but higher amperage giving the tools more power

Andy
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #14  
I have EGO string trimmer and 18" chainsaw and love them both. I replaced the string trimmer head with a circular saw blade and clear trails of up to 2" saplings. It's a workhorse and never skips a beat, even when overworked like that.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #15  
Bought the Dewalt 20v (bare tool) string trimmer. Have around 8 batteries for tool collection. They may have a 60v version.

So far I'm really liking my 20V brushless DeWalt. Only in my first season so time will tell if it holds up. It seems every bit as strong as my old ST275 Homelite was and starts first time every time. Actually so did the Homelite for 30+ years but I finally needed a part for it that was NLA. The shorter string and reverse rotation took some time to adjust to and I would still prefer if it turned clockwise.

After much review of on line reports I bought the DeWalt Flexvolt trimmer. Many times I want to trim "small" brush and it will handle a blade but I usually use the cutter head with 3 floppy "arms". I've also got a Stihl FS250 for the real big stuff.








i
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #16  
Want to buy the DeWalt. I already have several DeWalt 60V carpentry tools, the 60V blower & chainsaw and the 60V impact along with several 60V batteries.
I hear there are some minor drawbacks on the weedeater, one being the guard is small, but they have a newer version with a bigger guard?
How does one tell if the newer version is the one they are getting?
Also, hearing its collapsible, which is great for storing in truck toolbox, but hearing the electric cable is frail or flimsy?

Anyone know if these have been resolved so I can buy with peace of mind?
 
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   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #17  
I have a Greenworks 60v string trimmer. I really like it. Good battery life and two speeds to choose from. My wife likes it too. She can pick it up and use it without any fuss. Super simple to restring too.
I also bought their 60v chainsaw too. With an 18” bar it’s a little beast.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #18  
Here's a very good weed wacker IMO Echo CDST-58V2AH 58V Cordless String Trimmer w/ 2Ah Battery and Charger ($269.)

I don't know if it would whack the week ? I have had some tough one's in my time , weeks that is ! :laughing:

:thumbsup:

I think there are so many good ones on the market now.

I got that same Echo 58V one a couple of years ago when it was the last one on the shelf at Lowe's and the manager gave me a good discount. I love it...rarely do I have enough energy to outlast the battery, and it recharges relatively quickly. I used it to replace an industrial level Stihl, and see no differences it what it can cut, other than I can't put a blade on it like on the Stihl...so the Stihl became the blade cutter, and this Echo is the regular go-to-trimmer. I did have to craft a clamp with an eye hook for it so I could attach my harness (shoulder strap) to it for using on long distance walks.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #19  
I can totally offer a recommendation for a weed wacker because I just recently bought one: BLACK+DECKER 40V, model # LST136B. I'd post a link from amazon, but seems every time I do, it redirects to ebay for some reason. Anyways, I bought the tool only ($56) because it uses the same battery/charger as my B+D hedge trimmer, which I'm also very happy with. The weed wacker adjusts in length and also the head flips with a push button for edging. Also has an edging guide. Automatic string advance (is a single string). Has a thumb dial for adjusting power.

Battery is great, btw...I've got around 45 min of hedge trimming to do when I do it, and I've never run out of juice doing it. Weed wacking, again, never ran out of power yet. The battery has a meter, so tells you when you're running it dry.
 
   / Battery Powered Week Whacker #20  
I had carb issues this spring with my old John Deere gas trimmer so I went and bought the Dewalt 20V Max model. I got the newer version that folds. Overall, it is really pretty decent. With a charged battery it seems to have plenty of power. My two complaints are that the string length is shorter than I'd like and I'd love to have higher capacity batteries than I have currently so they last longer. Don't get me wrong... I can trim a fair amount on a single fully charged 4 or 5 aH battery. Usually my whole area that I trim. But if I don't happen to have a fully charged battery it can run down before I'm done.

It's a solid unit that seems to stand up to Dewalt's level of quality, which I've found to be good. It's light, which is really nice. And it is much quieter than a gas trimmer. I think people with close neighbors might find that part nice. I may try to extend the shield out an inch or so which would get me a longer line length. With that and keeping my batteries charged up more religiously it would really have few things for me to complain about.

I should also mention that I like how they load the line on these trimmers. Easier than other ones I've used in the past.

Rob
 

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