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Thread: Strimmer Woes -- Help

  1. #1

    Default Strimmer Woes -- Help

    This will probably get booted to gardening (or technical support??), but really it is a general cry for help.

    Does anybody have a garden strimmer that does what it supposed to do regarding "self feeding cord". i.e. when the strimmer cord gets short you are supposed to dunt the spring loaded button on the bottom on the ground and hey presto the cord feeds out "automatically" and is the cut to the right length by the sharp thingy on the guard.

    I have access to 3 different types of strimmer and not one will autofeed. I am sick fed up of having to sit down at regualr intervals and dismantle the strimmer head to find the cord which has disappeared.

    Any suggestions.. ..please!?
    Take a hundred lines:- "The word is INFRACTION not INFARTION"

  2. #2

    Default Strimmer

    Try a different thickness of twine. Worked for me

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    5,321

    Default

    I can't suggest anything better than what you're doing already. I've had to do it many times over the years with loads of strimmer's. They work when new but after a while they are crap. I'd like to find the chief of Black and Decker and strim his hairy head but it would probably jam up again.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Thurso
    Posts
    808

    Angry

    sorry, i have the kiss o death wi these things. i have two strimmers sitting in the back porch and i hate them. grrrrrr.
    it's a sair fecht

  5. #5

    Default

    I experience exactly the same difficulty with the GL546 twin-line feed from Black & Decker.
    The thing is useless and has never worked properly.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Here and there
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    1,500

    Default

    I have a gas powered one and that thing can be really hard to start so when the dunt does not work it is really maddening. My neighbours have seen me chuck that thing across the yard more than once -- the 90 degree heat makes me a little testier than usual. There is something to the thickness of the line though, the dunt is working beautifully on the type I have in there now. Try another brand of line and see if it works. I've probably jinxed myself now.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
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    5,321

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by percy toboggan View Post
    I experience exactly the same difficulty with the GL546 twin-line feed from Black & Decker.
    The thing is useless and has never worked properly.

    Ah, so there's the root of your problem percy. You bought the old GL546, well known in strimmer circles for being a temperamental blighter for only feeding out one line. You should have splashed out an extra 73p and got the GL746 BGT TXi with overhead solozapator. It works beautifully. In fact the lady next door has asked me to trim her bush with it.

  8. #8
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    Feb 2008
    Posts
    5,321

    Default

    Have any of you tried buying some new dunts? B & Q sell them in packs of 10. Lord Lucan advertises them. So I am led to believe.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Lady In Bed View Post
    Try a different thickness of twine. Worked for me
    Thanks for that. New problem now, as the spool becomes empty the twine comes out too readily..think I'll revert to the good old shears.
    Take a hundred lines:- "The word is INFRACTION not INFARTION"

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    5,321

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by brokencross View Post
    Thanks for that. New problem now, as the spool becomes empty the twine comes out too readily..think I'll revert to the good old shears.

    Lol brokencross. Someone,somewhere has it in for you.

  11. #11

    Default Twine

    Quote Originally Posted by brokencross View Post
    Thanks for that. New problem now, as the spool becomes empty the twine comes out too readily..think I'll revert to the good old shears.

    Possibly the twine is not anchored to the spool which would cause this problem

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Thurso
    Posts
    808

    Smile

    Quote Originally Posted by joxville View Post
    Ah, so there's the root of your problem percy. You bought the old GL546, well known in strimmer circles for being a temperamental blighter for only feeding out one line. You should have splashed out an extra 73p and got the GL746 BGT TXi with overhead solozapator. It works beautifully. In fact the lady next door has asked me to trim her bush with it.

    hahahahahaha!!
    it's a sair fecht

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Posts
    1,104

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by brokencross View Post
    This will probably get booted to gardening (or technical support??), but really it is a general cry for help.

    Does anybody have a garden strimmer that does what it supposed to do regarding "self feeding cord". i.e. when the strimmer cord gets short you are supposed to dunt the spring loaded button on the bottom on the ground and hey presto the cord feeds out "automatically" and is the cut to the right length by the sharp thingy on the guard.

    I have access to 3 different types of strimmer and not one will autofeed. I am sick fed up of having to sit down at regualr intervals and dismantle the strimmer head to find the cord which has disappeared.

    Any suggestions.. ..please!?
    If you are prepared to buy another strimmer then get a cordless one. Cordless in two ways - a blade frather than a piece of nylon and petrol or battery powered. I leafte came in the door very recently for a battery one which I am considering. Less than £40 and while it is an extra outlay I will, hopefully, save on buying nylon and keep my blood pressure down.

  14. #14
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    May 2008
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    Clean Weeker
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joxville View Post
    In fact the lady next door has asked me to trim her bush with it.
    And have you duly obliged?
    Behold the turtle - he only ever gets anywhere by sticking his neck out...

  15. #15
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    Feb 2005
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    5,900

    Default

    Gravel or cement the whole area and throw all the strimmers and other stuff in the bin.
    Some people are like Slinkies. They're really good for nothing. But they still bring a smile to your face when you push them down a flight of stairs.

  16. #16
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    Feb 2008
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AfternoonDelight View Post
    And have you duly obliged?
    Yes,and her husband was very pleased too. The last time he tried it he damaged his wire.

  17. #17
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    Feb 2008
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Cattach View Post
    If you are prepared to buy another strimmer then get a cordless one. Cordless in two ways - a blade frather than a piece of nylon and petrol or battery powered. I leafte came in the door very recently for a battery one which I am considering. Less than £40 and while it is an extra outlay I will, hopefully, save on buying nylon and keep my blood pressure down.
    If that fails just fetch the nylon and find a very high tree.

  18. #18
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    Feb 2008
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by changilass View Post
    Gravel or cement the whole area and throw all the strimmers and other stuff in the bin.

    Are you suggesting he should lose the plot? Methinks he already has.

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joxville View Post
    Ah, so there's the root of your problem percy. You bought the old GL546, well known in strimmer circles for being a temperamental blighter for only feeding out one line. You should have splashed out an extra 73p and got the GL746 BGT TXi with overhead solozapator. It works beautifully. In fact the lady next door has asked me to trim her bush with it.
    Made me laugh jox...thanks...couldn't good rep you until I've 'spread it around' a bit. Oooer.

  20. #20
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    Jul 2001
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    La-la Land
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    2,576

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joxville View Post
    Have any of you tried buying some new dunts? B & Q sell them in packs of 10. Lord Lucan advertises them. So I am led to believe.
    I have to admire the nerve of anyone who will type that word in an org posting, given how badly I type, and the proximity of "d" and "c" on a qwerty keyboard.

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