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T O P I C    R E V I E W
cirvin Posted - Nov 05 2003 : 10:14:34 PM
i know this topic is done to death but i had another idea for a motor linkage. you put a hydraulic pump on the vert engine, run a line to a hydraulic motor geared to the motor. when you hit the lever, the motor goes and so do you! the motor would be slow, but since it is powerfull, you can use aggressive ratios to up the speed

15   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
BEatonNo1 Posted - Nov 13 2003 : 8:03:18 PM
thats cool, I cant see myself mowing our "yard" with an extension cord

Aaron Cake Posted - Nov 13 2003 : 10:44:56 AM
Yes, all the time. It doesn't cut. I don't even really bother trying to avoid it. Personally, I have never had any cord problems. It takes all of 30 seconds to figure out how to position it, and after that it becomes automatic and you don't even think about it. My brother, however, did manage to cut the cord once. The lawnmower just stopped....However, as I said, I run over it all the time. It generally sits too low to be cut.

Lots of people use electric lawnmowers around here, and I rarely hear of any cord problems. In my opinion, much more dangerous to use a gas mower.

cirvin Posted - Nov 12 2003 : 6:15:46 PM
i could just see that happeneing. *whistle whistle, snap! kzzzzt!!!! BOOM!*

BEatonNo1 Posted - Nov 12 2003 : 4:23:26 PM
cord huh? have you ever run over it

Aaron Cake Posted - Nov 12 2003 : 3:03:24 PM
My electric mower is corded. No batteries. I would think that a battery laden-mower would be quite heavy...Though probably not much more then a gas mower.

cirvin Posted - Nov 10 2003 : 11:27:49 PM
i enjoy the smell of freshly cut grass accented by the fragrence of burnt gasoline. it makes everything more better better more...

i am quite sure wal mart doesn't carry those king of battries for that low of a price. buy one and try. if it doesn't work, you only be out 20$

BEatonNo1 Posted - Nov 10 2003 : 5:59:57 PM
yeah...I just think it would be a pain to have to charge it...especially out here I could probly only mow 1/3 of the "Lawn" and then have to charge it. Im waiting for fuel cells to get cheap

Aaron Cake Posted - Nov 10 2003 : 09:57:46 AM
I have been using an electric lawnmower for 17 years. Clean, efficient, quiet and zero maintenance...Compared to the gas mower that my (me and my brother) lawn business used to use, it was a dream. You could actually smell freshly cut grass, and not gas...

Anyway...

quote:

aaron thanks so much for that info i have another question would an washing mashine motor work and how long would a couple of those 12 volt batteries that are for an electric mower last. please help i dont know much about go karts i just want one that can work sbeed is not an issue


The short answer is no. The motor is completely wrong. You need a motor designed for 12 or 24V. eBay has TONNES of them listed. You then need a way to control that motor. Check out the two electric scooter topics:

Electric Scooter

Electric Scooter Sadness



Edited by - Aaron Cake on Nov 10 2003 09:58:47 AM
gokartmaniac Posted - Nov 08 2003 : 7:44:04 PM
well they are from walmart so you mite be able to go to walmart.com and find them

Seth A. Meredith
cirvin Posted - Nov 08 2003 : 10:16:11 AM
mmmmm. diesel, one of the greatest overlooked inventions of the industrial revolution.

i'm quite sure that the battries are engine start. do they have an amp/hour rating, or jst cranking amps? trust me, deep cycle battries that big wont sell for 10$ where is the site you got your information? i would suggest you get a big 12v motor, and a deep cycle marine battery. there are actually some sites (of witch i forgot) that shows you how to modify engine starters for high torque motors.

BEatonNo1 Posted - Nov 08 2003 : 01:01:31 AM
electric lawn mowers?? thats a new one on me, around here its all petro and desil ...sounds like a royal pain in the rear

da-g-dog Posted - Nov 07 2003 : 10:29:21 PM
quote:

ohhhh
those are engine start battries.



Umm, no. If you look at gocartmaniacs most, it says they are for an ELECTRIC mower. They are not start batteries for a gas engine.

hike master kyle
cirvin Posted - Nov 07 2003 : 10:15:03 PM
ohhhh
those are engine start battries. they turn over the engines on riding lawnmowers. they are only good for high amperages for a short period of time. it would be impractical to use theese. i would use gell cell, get like 20 amp/hour units, at 12 volts you ll need ten and the motor should work. that is why i suggested the motor form a battrie powered lawnmower. powerfull and low voltage. if you do use one of theese, get a deep cycle marine battrie at the least, gel cell is the way to go.

gokartmaniac Posted - Nov 07 2003 : 9:53:46 PM
yes there about the size of car batteries you buy them for ten bucks at walmart

Seth A. Meredith
cirvin Posted - Nov 07 2003 : 07:10:48 AM
the battries will at most give you 24 volts dc. your motor most likely needs 120 volts ac. are the battries big? i would use the motor off the electric lawnmower. if you still want to use the washer motor, ether get a loooooooong extension cord, or an inverter like the one on aaron's circuts page.


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