no Questions?

   / no Questions? #71  
If I had a small lawn, I'd consider one. Less hassle for sure. However one consideration is still battery replacement over time. In 5-10 years am I buying $3000 worth of batteries? Are those batteries still available? Or is the mower now a throw away? Battery tech moves so fast, Id worry it would be obsolete.
At least motors have standard bolt patterns. Batteries are proprietary.
 
   / no Questions? #72  
I actually like some battery equipment. I just bought a new FlowZone Typhoon for lawn treatments. It'll pump 100 gallons on a charge, capable of up to 115psi. I can walk a typical residential lawn in under 10 minutes with it. Easily 10+ lawns on a charge. On two batteries I can do a full day of work. But it wasn't $6000. It'll pay for itself in short order.
 
   / no Questions? #73  
I think Arly got some great answer to his questions...It's too bad he dismissed all of them.
 
   / no Questions? #74  
As soon as you bring up hillside or slope in conjunction with the word mower, I don't think anyone likes the answers, especially at the prices they are asking now.
 

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