I've been putting off getting a petty strimmer for ages now, and the time has come.
The lady at B&Q reccomended mcculloch,
i've seen a ryobi on ebay for only £50
can also pick up a mcculloch for about £60
I know you get what you pay for, etc, etc. But I'm not up to a stihl.
My choice is Mcculloch Trim mac 250
or Ryobi RLT30 CD
And I need to order it today or tomorrow
Your esteemed advice , please!
Quote from: joestig on June 15, 2009, 02:30:40
I've been putting off getting a petty strimmer for ages now, and the time has come.
The lady at B&Q reccomended mcculloch,
i've seen a ryobi on ebay for only £50
can also pick up a mcculloch for about £60
I know you get what you pay for, etc, etc. But I'm not up to a stihl.
My choice is Mcculloch Trim mac 250
or Ryobi RLT30 CD
And I need to order it today or tomorrow
Your esteemed advice , please!
I've got a Ryobi and although it has its quirks (starting procedure isn't what the manual says) it's not a bad little thing and the fact you can get other heads for pruning, a very small cultivator, mower etc makes it very versatile. As a strimmer I find the standard bump-feed handles most everything I've ever thrown at it but it struggles on older and more robust stuff, the Procut will go through anything up to brambles and the Trigon brushcutter handles them pretty easily..... pick the head for the job and the rest is easy.....
chrisc
Funnily enough, I bought a McCulloch from B&Q. It wouldn't start, so they changed it. The replacement was so unreliable that the following year we bought a Ryobi. Never had a problem.
I'd go for the Ryobi, had mine 2 years still going strong. Like Chris says you can get different heads for it.
Quote from: northener on June 15, 2009, 07:33:59
I'd go for the Ryobi, had mine 2 years still going strong. Like Chris says you can get different heads for it.
Make sure it mentions "Expand-It" . Most 30cc Ryobi should be OK.... They even make one with a starter motor and little rechargeable battereies for starting.....
chrisc
I've got a Ryobi 30cc with strimmer head and the expandit cultivator. Been using it for 2 years without a problem. Starts easy and runs like a dream.
The cultivator head is no good for rotavating new ground but is excellent for creating a fine tilth once it's dug or for no dig beds and for churning in manure.
The strimmer I use around both plots, down my caravan and on the river bank around my mooring. I wouldn't be without mine.
How much did you pay for it Tony? Been considering one for ages think it will fe great for the raised beds.
I bought it a few years ago, both came to about £150 from Wyvale. They may have gone up a bit by now but like I said before, I wouldn't be without mine.
thanks for the advice, chaps. Keep it coming. It's looking like the ryobi. It think bot mculloch and ryobi can use the expand it tools. That's one of the main reasons I want it.
I want the rotorvator thingy
VRoooom! Vrooom!
Our site strimmer broke and I have priced and submitted a request to the town council for a new one. I have opted for one from B&Q for £339 providing they agree funds. It does all the paths and edging around 2 of our sites covering 130 plots. It is also used to strim overgrown plots before allocating to newcomers. Not sure of the model but our last one lasted 7-8 years.
I was very happy with my Ryobi, nearly killed me getting it started first time, until I ignored the manual. Was stolen a few months back, which left me gutted.
Quote from: amphibian on June 15, 2009, 21:51:20
I was very happy with my Ryobi, nearly killed me getting it started first time, until I ignored the manual.
There is a knack to mine... Put it on cold start, pull once, take it off cold start, pull again and away it goes. Pull it more than once on cold start and it floods requiring the plug to be removed to dry it out.
Sorry to here you lost yours... Barstewards !
anyone got one of those attachments for a ryobi strimmer for cutting the grass, just wondering if they are any good.
I'd go for the ryobi every time or a Makita or a Stihl if I could afford it. Screwfix have Ryobi Stimmers with pruner and hedging attachment for £65 at present.
Quote from: Plot69 on June 15, 2009, 21:58:06
Quote from: amphibian on June 15, 2009, 21:51:20
I was very happy with my Ryobi, nearly killed me getting it started first time, until I ignored the manual.
There is a knack to mine... Put it on cold start, pull once, take it off cold start, pull again and away it goes. Pull it more than once on cold start and it floods requiring the plug to be removed to dry it out.
Sorry to here you lost yours... Barstewards !
Mine started by squeezing the throttle while pulling, never flooded. I loved that strimmer.
£65 are you sure? Was that instore or online, I could online find that package for £145
http://www.screwfix.com/prods/60197/Landscaping/Landscaping-Power-Tools/Brushcutters-Trimmers/Ryobi-30cc-Touch-Start-Line-Trimmer-Extension-Pruner-attachment
Sorry - your right -miss read the advertising..... itsa £65 saving.
Quote from: amphibian on June 16, 2009, 21:51:16
Mine started by squeezing the throttle while pulling, never flooded. I loved that strimmer.
That's the same as mine
Got my Ryobi at xmas , Lovely piece of kit , As other people have said ignore the handbook on ,
The starting .
doh! I had my eye on one on ebay for £50 and free delivery. By the time I'd waited a day for a few replies on here, they'd all gone. :-[
Never mind, got one for £55 and a tenner delivered, which is still cheaper than Argos, B&Q, etc, etc
Ryobi 30cc
I'll let you know how it goes.
Vroom! Vroom!
got it! Had a go in the yard with it, all seems good, easy enough to start with a few goes. I can't seem to let it idle, though. If you leave it running it just stops. MY rabbit ran for cover though, it's LOUD.
gonna take on th weeds on Weds I think, supposed to be dry through the week.
You need to adjust the idle screw... Not too much mind, 16th turn at a time until it ticks over nicely.
Remember where the screw was set before you start though, just in case you thingy it right up ::)
Quote from: Plot69 on June 21, 2009, 18:24:20just in case you thingy it right up ::)
Thingy? I never said "Thingy it right up" Is there some sort of censorship filter on here?
You said COCK IT RIGHT UP. The site's automated obscenity police would be straight onto that!
Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on June 22, 2009, 17:40:57The site's automated obscenity police would be straight onto that!
How did you get away with it then?
Highlight part of the word and press the red A. It puzzles the autopigs every time.
Well the first trip up to the patch was ok, it started easily enough, but after it ran out of petrol (had been running about 25 or 30 mins) it would'nt start again, so I packed up for the day. Will try again this weekend.
As luck would have it, they had 800w generators in B&Q for £60, so i've bought one of those too. Good for leccy strimmer, etc . Haven't tried that yet though/
Thes things are supposed to be useful if you have trees that need pruning as well as strimming to do (http://www.ryobi-direct.co.uk/Portals/0/Templates/RYOBI%20APR-03%20EXPANDIT%20PRUNER%20ATTACHMENT.jpg)
My 4-yr old niece refers to it as "a chainsaw lolly".....
::)
chrisc
have u seen the new ryobi, no more pull cords it has a re chargable battery and a press start, bit pricey though. ;D