Friday, December 30, 2011

Earthwise TC70001 11-Inch 8-1/2 Amp Electric Tiller/Cultivator

!±8±Earthwise TC70001 11-Inch 8-1/2 Amp Electric Tiller/Cultivator

Brand : Earthwise
Rate :
Price : $119.99
Post Date : Dec 31, 2011 01:17:30
Usually ships in 24 hours



Earthwise 8-1/2 amp electric tiller - cultivator. Dual 4 blade steel tines has a cutting width of 11-Inches and tilling depth of 8 1/2-Inch. Perfect to meet your gardening needs.

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Craftsman 24in Tiller W/ 5HP Briggs And Stratton Engine. Wet Cold Start

Hasent been started in about 2 days and before that it had not been started in about 2 years. lots more videos of this to come so make sure to subscribe and check them out, after i edit them and get them up to you guys.

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Garden Tiller - What Type Do You Need

!±8± Garden Tiller - What Type Do You Need

Well it's that time of year again to start busting up your garden soil and start your planting. How you do that is up to you. If you need the exercise or have a very small garden you could always do it by hand.

To save your back and knees you could go with a stand up manual garden till like the famous garden weasel. It is cheap and easy to use.

For medium or large gardens you are going to need a garden tiller with a little more power than your arms. So what type of tiller do you buy?

If you have a smaller or confined garden you will want to go with something maneuverable like an electric mini tiller or cultivator. Or maybe a small 2hp gas model. Most of them are lightweight and very easy to handle. Cost on them is reasonable too for the amount of work they will save you.

One of the biggest pluses for a small garden till is that it uses less storage space. If you buy one with folding handles you can save even more room. A word of warning though, I would not recommend using a small garden tiller to start a new garden where the soil has never been broken up before. You will need something a little more heavy duty to cultivate your soil for the first time.

Renting a large heavy-duty garden tiller the first year to bust up your soil and then get a small tiller for maintenance and cultivating the following year.

Front tine vs. rear tine

The best purpose for a front tine tiller is maintaining soil that has been cultivated before. Start out the first time with a rear tine tiller.

Rear tine tillers are easy to handle and maneuver. They will pretty much turn on a dime when needed and require much less effort from the operator. The majority of rear tine tillers can handle any garden job that you require from them.

What Brand To Buy

There are many different brand names in the garden tiller business. Some of the better known garden tiller brands are, Troy Bilt Garden tillers, Mantis Tillers, Honda Tillers, Husqvarna Garden Tillers, Craftsman Tillers, and MTD Tillers. Prices and models vary a lot so the best thing you can do is shop around and compare after you have decided on what type you need for your garden.

If you are a vegetable garden grower I recently read a book called vegetable garden secrets that is going to change the way I garden. I highly recommend it. You can find it on our site.


Garden Tiller - What Type Do You Need

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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Troy-Bilt Super Bronco garden agriculturalist startup and run

Video of my 2003 Troy-Bilt Super Bronco rear tine tiller starting up after a cold winter. A quick walk-though and some footage tilling up the garden. I purchased this unit in 2003 with one of two things in mind: I'd use it, love it and keep it forever, or use it, find out I don't want to garden, and sell it. Five years later, I've still got it. It is a standard rotating tine tiller powered by a B&S Intek 6.5 HP motor. It is an MTD machine. The only non-scheduled maintenance has been a belt replacement. In the video it appears if the front bumper is loose, but it is just the shutter speed of the camera making the vibration of the tiller look worse then it actually is.

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Saturday, November 19, 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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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Black & Decker GC818 18-Volt Cordless Electric Garden Cultivator

!±8±Black & Decker GC818 18-Volt Cordless Electric Garden Cultivator

Brand : Black & Decker
Rate :
Price : $69.99
Post Date : Nov 15, 2011 21:00:10
Usually ships in 24 hours



The Black & Decker 18-volt cordless rechargeable garden cultivator is ideal for cultivating garden beds, landscape beds and weeding. This garden cultivator also preps beds for planting and prepping dry and dead spots for seeding. The 18 volts of power provide an effortless and quick way to weed and aerate soil. The long tines are small enough to maneuver in between plants and counter-oscillating tines prevent weeds from tangling. The telescoping shaft adjusts for the perfect length, allowing the user to operate it standing up without bending over. This upright design offers less fatigue while cultivating. The soft grips and adjustable auxiliary handle provide this power tool with maximum comfort. The garden cultivator comes with Black & Decker's 2-year warranty.

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Monday, October 31, 2011

MAAX Mini Tiller / Power Weeder 1

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

The Different Types of Cultivators

!±8± The Different Types of Cultivators

Garden Cultivators are tools that are used to break up the soil to prepare it for planting. Breaking up the soil allows for water, air, and other nutrients to get to the roots of the plant. It also helps decrease the amount of weeds that grow around the plants. If weeds do grow, they are much easier to remove from cultivated soil.

There are a few options when it comes to purchasing Garden Cultivators. Choosing the right cultivator for the job is really important. Some plants do not need a great deal of aeration and their roots may not need to be planted deep in the soil. For these plants, a manual cultivator may be sufficient.

Most manual cultivators have a long handle so that they can be used while standing. They also have blades on the bottom so that the user can manually rotate them to break up the soil. They come in a variety of sizes - some of them are so small that they can be used while sitting or kneeling.

For larger areas that require more depth, electric or battery operated Garden Cultivators may be used. The blades on these cultivators are moved by electricity or battery power. They typically have longer blades than those on a manual cultivator and do not require the user to work as hard. For even larger areas that require a lot of depth, a gas powered cultivator may be used.

These tools have an engine that rotates the blades. Their blades can be up to three times bigger than those of a manual cultivator. They can cover a lot more ground in a short amount of time because they are so powerful. These are typically used by individuals who are planting a large vegetable garden, while a manual or electric cultivators are usually used for flower gardens.

Not only do the types of Garden Cultivators vary in functionality, they also vary greatly in price. Small, manual cultivators can be purchased for under , while a large, gas powered cultivator may cost up to several hundred dollars. This is why it is so important to choose the right cultivator for the task at hand. It would not be wise to spend hundreds of dollars to break up a small amount of soil, but, on the other hand, purchasing a manual cultivator for a large area just to save money would not get the job done.


The Different Types of Cultivators

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