The 2 stage has no problem with heavy wet snow, or snowbanks, and runs long enough on the pair of 8Ah packs it came with to do my driveway, front walk, a street parking space, as well as my neighbor's driveway. My driveway isn't very big (if you park 4 cars 2x2 in it you've covered most of the pavement), but I get buried pretty badly by the snowplows. Probably should have ordered several of them now that I know how much better the mower performs.īy now they probably have replaced it with a new part number, meaning a whole new search, lol. It was backordered, and I had all but forgotten I'd ordered it by the time it arrived. I wasn't able to order it direct from Greenworks, but M and D carried it. It's part number 333041179B vs the 333041179 blade it came with. Yup, it's for my Greenworks mower linked in the old post. Is the high lift blade for Greenworks? If so where did you get it? I'm probably going to buy one of the 60V backpack blowers, because I find the blower I have a bit tiring to use after a while. The only thing that makes me wish I'd gone with Ego tools instead is the Ego 2-stage snowblower (which was not on the market when I bought my mower). Normally they operate at low speed and only crank up the power when the motor loads up to conserve battery life. The newer mowers have a button to ramp them up to full power on demand which likely helps this a lot. The mower is as good as any other push mower I've used, although it does lack suction for picking up leaves. Sticking to one battery system means you can buy bare tools to save money, or buy tool+battery combos and get an extra pack to use on your other equipment. I'm happy with all of it (the string trimmer is amazing), and I would definitely recommend looking at all the tools that share a battery to keep future purchases in mind. I have Greenworks 60V stuff - 21in self-propelled mower, attachment capable 16in string trimmer, blower, and chainsaw. New Hampshire - The University of New Hampshire Nebraska - University of Nebraska-Lincoln ^ Add your zone to your flair under Community Options! ^įind the university of your state/region: The more photos or context to the situation will help us identify the problem and propose some solutions. Other photos should include close-ups of the grass or weed in question: such as this, this, or this. One photo should contain enough information for people to understand the immediate area around the problem (dense shade, extremely sloped, etc.). You can upload to for free and it's easy to do.
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