A friend recently bought a new electric (battery, not corded) lawnmower - WORX brand, 40 V, 14", advertised as having with two batteries. It was on sale for around C$300.
I thought, good, that way you can have one battery charging while you cut with the other.
As it turns out, the mower runs the two 20 V batteries in series to make the nominal 40 V. It's not possible to run the mower on one battery only.
I thought the advertising was a bit misleading.
However, it's a good unit for his purposes - light and compact, and the small deck is sufficient for his small yard and better for storage.
The only thing is, the battery capacity is limited - we cut only part of his front lawn, perhaps 15 minutes of operation, and the battery strength had dropped to 3 bars out of 5.
He could pick up other tools that use the same 20 V battery, and that would solve the spare battery issue.
I thought, good, that way you can have one battery charging while you cut with the other.
As it turns out, the mower runs the two 20 V batteries in series to make the nominal 40 V. It's not possible to run the mower on one battery only.
I thought the advertising was a bit misleading.
However, it's a good unit for his purposes - light and compact, and the small deck is sufficient for his small yard and better for storage.
The only thing is, the battery capacity is limited - we cut only part of his front lawn, perhaps 15 minutes of operation, and the battery strength had dropped to 3 bars out of 5.
He could pick up other tools that use the same 20 V battery, and that would solve the spare battery issue.