Lawn Mowers: Cordless and Electric Lawn Mowing Machines
These batter-powered cordless and electric lawn mowers are clean, quiet and easy to maintain and will save gas.
April/May 2005
By Scott Hollis
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The Black & Decker CMM1000 (above left) and the Neuton mower (above right) both perfom well on small to medium-sized lawns in normal grass conditions.
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Now that spring is here, it’s time to drag out the lawn mower for another season. If you’re tired of that noisy and smelly gas-powered mower, then maybe it’s time you discovered cordless, electric, battery-powered lawn mowers. Clean, quiet and easy to start, they require no gas, oil changes or spark plugs. The battery takes the extension cord out of the lawn mower equation, and starting is gentler on your back than yanking a starter cord.
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Cordless, battery-powered lawn mowers vary in sizes and performance. We tested three cordless electric lawn mower brands, each in a different size: Sunlawn’s Brill Accumower ASM380 reel mower, the Neuton mower (see Image Gallery) and Black & Decker’s CMM1000 (see Image Gallery). We were pleased with all three lawn mowers when used on small to medium-sized lawns in normal grass conditions. All three scored high marks for their quietness, nonpolluting operation and easy maintenance.
No Noise Lawn Mowers
Cordless, electric lawn mowers are much easier on your ears compared to their gas counterparts. The average electric mower makes no more noise than a washing machine (about 75 decibels), while a gas-powered lawn mower can make as much noise as a motorcycle (about 95 decibels).
Noise pollution is a real problem with gas mowers, as any late sleeper on a Saturday morning knows. But they can be more than a nuisance for those who use them. Loud noise can contribute to hearing loss when it exceeds 85 decibels, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH; www.cdc.gov/niosh). A gas-powered mower producing 95 decibels should be used no more than an hour a day, according to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA; www.osha.gov). Switching to an electric mower will ease the stress on your ears and your neighbors.
Bag the Air pollution
Besides giving your eardrums a break, battery-powered mowers offer a compelling environmental benefit — they pollute much less than gas-powered mowers. Gas lawn mower manufacturers are designing more efficient engines to comply with the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) new emission standards for lawn-and-garden equipment, but many lawn mowers predate these new standards. Even new gas mowers that meet the EPA standards still spew a higher percentage of VOCs (volatile organic compounds) into the air than automobiles. According to a 2003 EPA report, lawn-and-garden equipment accounts for 5 percent of all ozone-forming emissions. The same report concludes that one hour of lawn mower usage produces as much air pollution as driving a car 20 miles.
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