Tuesday, November 29, 2011

How to Buy the Best Leaf Blower

!±8± How to Buy the Best Leaf Blower

Leaf blowers are becoming more and more popular every year, and for good reason. In this day and age, raking the leaves is a t hing of the past. Why would you risk hurting your back when you can easily just blast them away? There are dozens of different types of leaf blowers to choose from and several manufacturers as well. Craftsman, John Deere, Stihl, Toro, Echo, Homelite, Ryobi, Poulan and Husqvarna are among the most common and reputable brands available.

Since there aren't too many stores that specialize in selling leaf blowers--if any at all--you may not have realized just how many different makes and models actually exist. If you are planning on buying a new leaf blower, it's important that you shop around and try to find the best one for your needs, including your budget; but how do you go about doing this, you may be asking? The easiest way by far is to shop online.

By shopping online, you have the luxury of browsing through selections from dozens of websites and online stores. This will allow you to get a better idea of which model and brand to buy as you will have plenty of options to consider. Additionally, you may also notice that the internet offers a lot of great sales and affordable prices, which is nice because leaf blowers do not usually come cheap.

Another advantage to browsing the web is that there are a lot of product reviews of all the most popular models which can help you tremendously in deciding whether or not the one you are interested in is actually worth your money. Make sure you take advantage of these product reviews because if people are willing to go out of their way to review something, whether good or bad, it's probably something that would benefit you quite a bit.

If you use these tips and take some time to shop around and compare prices and selections, you shouldn't have any trouble finding a leaf blower that is right for you. It may take a bit of time, but in the end it will be well worth it. With all of the great brands, models and resources, you are bound to get it eventually, and when you do you can finally put that old rake away for good.


How to Buy the Best Leaf Blower

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

!±8± The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

If you're like most home owners who mow their own lawns, you probably find that the first time you go to start your lawn mower in the spring, it is a lot harder to start than it is for the rest of the lawn mowing season. Maybe you get frustrated with it, forget that you aren't a teenager any more, and throw your back out giving the pull-start a furious yank. Maybe you then think to yourself  "I wish I had one of those electric start lawn mowers". If you have an electric-start lawn mower, maybe you are thinking "man, this thing has electric start and it still sounds dead. Thank god I don't have one of those manual start models."

By the time you have been trying to start your lawn mower for a few minutes, you have probably tried some with the choke on, and then maybe your "helpful" neighbor came by and told you that you probably flooded the engine. So maybe you try starting it a few times with the throttle opened up a bit and the choke off. If you have a manual-start machine, you may be contemplating your impending chiropractic bill, and wondering whether hiring the neighbor's kid to mow your lawn might not be such a bad idea after all.

So why can it be so hard to start an engine that has been sitting idle for six months? If you examined the spark plug under a microscope, you might figure out the problem. If you look at the tip of the spark plug with your naked eye, it will probably look fine, but if you replace that plug with a brand new clean dry sparkplug, you would probably find that your lawn mower will likely start in seconds.

The key to the mystery lies in something at the microscopic level the happens on the surface of the ceramic insulator of a spark plug over time in a machine that is stored outdoors. As the temperature and the relative humidity cycles, day after day, over time, micro-droplets condense on and re-evaporate from the surface of the ceramic insulator of your spark plug. Each time these micro-droplets form, they rearrange the tiny carbon particles that were deposited on your spark plug the last time you ran your engine. The growing of the droplets as they form pushes those particles together into conductive pathways that wind up providing an alternate path for electrical current (across the surface of the ceramic insulator instead of across the spark gap) when you try to start your lawn mower.

The carbon particles don't quite short things out, but they provide a path whose electrical resistance is low enough so that there is no spark, or the spark has so little energy that it won't ignite the charge in the cylinder. Once the engine starts, the heat of the burns within the calendar clears up this problem in a few minutes, so when you go to start the engine again the next week, it starts fine.

One easy solution for this initial-start problem is to replace the spark plug. Of course, if you want a cheaper solution that doesn't require a trip to the store, I have one for you, and it comes in the form of a hot flame. A propane torch works best, but if you don't happen to have one handy, a butane lighter or a gas stove burner will do. You see, there is a reason that the ceramic insulator surrounding the center electrode of your spark plug is made of the particular material it is made of. The surface properties of that material actually catalyze the burning off of carbon deposits when the ceramic gets hot enough. Of course, when your lawn mower has not yet started, nothing has yet gotten it "hot enough".

To solve this problem, remove the spark plug from your lawn mower, and get a hot clean flame ready (either a propane torch or a butane lighter, or gas burner on a stove). Holding on to the end of the spark plug that usually connects to the spark plug wire, stick the other end (the spark end) of the spark plug into the flame for a few seconds while rotating the spark plug a few times, heating the center electrode and the surrounding ceramic. It only takes a few seconds. After you take the spark plug out of the flame, take a look at the ceramic material surrounding the center electrode.

You should notice that the ceramic insulator surrounding the center electrode of your spark plug is now bright white, where before it might have been off-white or gray. Now your spark plug is as good as new. Put it back in your lawn mower, and enjoy how it roars quickly to life!


The Fastest Way to Start Your Lawn Mower When It's Been Sitting Idle Since Last Fall

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