For the longest time my one uncle's preferred weed removal tool was a well worn and well sharpened scythe, he would just wave it at the weeds and they would fall over.But - you have to get them out to cut the slot. Takes a special tool. Come in a set of 3 sizes. EPA really frowns on those getting in the public's hands . Just saying. Check ebay.
In these parts a weed whip has a long handle and a blade about 10" that cut on both sides. Swung my man power. No carb needed.
How does that work on weeds growing out of a crack in the sidewalk?my one uncle's preferred weed removal tool was a well worn and well sharpened scythe . . .
How does that work on weeds growing out of a crack in the sidewalk?
Push mower handled them,How does that work on weeds growing out of a crack in the sidewalk?
We lived in the country, didn't worry about edging the sidewalk. When the grass started to over grow the sidewalk a good sharp flat shovel and cart took care of the problem.We only had about 20 feet of sidewalk to the driveway, had no use for powered weed whackers or edgers.How does your push mower work at edging the sidewalk . . . or do you just use RoundUp?
I use my ECHO weed eater that uses .105" string to do all my edging. Kindest thing done for 2 strokes is use only non-ethanol gas.
Even the tanks.thay say 10% vary.I think ethanol content varies by area?
I wish we had e50 or e85 available every where. My subaru would have the ethanol sensor and tune done to run on corn. That's good for 50 to 100hp in a turbo car....
Or small engines!Even the tanks.thay say 10% vary.
I've seen where 10% tanks tested at 25%
Not good on older vehicles