The thing about the electric is on flat ground you almost don’t need self propel because it is so light.
Sorry to bump an old thread but a neighbor's house caught fire a couple nights ago from a battery for his yard equipment. Just a reminder that there is a risk with lithium batteries and while I dont have any idea how rare the incidence of these occurrences are, I have responded to at least 5 or 6 of these fires myself over the last few years. Im looking to get a storage container to keep my batteries in. My biggest fear is to have a fire start in my garage while we are at work and our dogs are at home.
There are gas mower fires every year too but I think many of them tend to happen during use or relatively shortly after. Here’s your solution, put one of these in your garage to monitor while away. https://a.co/d/9R5FoTq
Thanks for bringing this up. So where and how are you supposed to store them? All the instructions say store at 50-80 degrees which is not our TX garage that only leaves the house. I read where most of the fires are from e-bikes and scooters. EGO batteries purport to be safer but I don’t know what that means.
One of the more irritating things I see and hear is when people ask or assume a car fire is an electric vehicle. I've responded to several vehicle fires over the years and one was a hybrid while all the other ones were gasoline/ICE engines. Electric vehicle fires are a problem especially if in a parking garage but they aren't common and I've yet to have to deal with one myself. That isn't the case for lawn equipment. There is, in my experience a new and different concern when it comes to lithium battery fires that does not compare to gasoline lawn equipment. Not at all the same as vehicle fires. In the relatively short existence of battery powered lawn equipment i have personally seen about 10 instances of battery fires involving lawn equipment or electric scooters. 2 of those resulted in the buildings being condemned from damage while several others were stopped but still suffered significant damage. The wife is into smart home equipment and smart detectors are one option but id still feel better with a designated box like a fuel cabinet just for batteries. Yard equipment batteries are small and will burn out in short time but they burn hot and catch everything around them on fire.
I only just started to search for options and apparently there are storage boxes with fire ratings made specifically for batteries. I haven't been too concerned with the idea until recently when a coworker used a newly installed pet camera in his house while at work and realized his kitchen was on fire with his dogs inside. Apparently they turned on the stove while counter surfing and he had something on top that caught fire. His neighbors weren't home so it was unlikely anyone would notice and call 911 until the fire was well involved.d Im meticulous about the stove and dont allow anything to be put on a stove top even temporarily because that's how accidents happen but it made me realize I need to address my growing battery collection one of which has recently started giving me an overheat warning even on a fresh charge. Im going to discard that one as a precaution because its not under warranty.
Well …… the wife hired a lawn service before I could decide on a mower. I was close on the EGO 800 series. Now, I need a real chain saw to remove trees that fall across the one road in/out of the neighborhood. Stihl or Husqvarna?