CHEESE2009
05-09-2009, 09:12 PM
So the grass is moist, but you cut it anyway. This happens to everyone I'm sure.
You check under the deck of your mower to see that the cut grass is caked on.
Your mower weighs a few extra pounds, & it's not happy. You need to remove the clogged & caked on grass from under the deck.
What do you do?
****-
What I do:
I lug around a heavy & flat stone. I would tilt the mower so that the handle bar is on the ground, & the blades & deck are seen & easy to work with.
I place my stone onto the handle bar carefully, making sure not to damage my baby. The stone keeps the mower tilted so I don't have to hold or lift it.
I always have a thick wire brush & putty knife. The putty knife enables me to scrape the debris off my mower. The wire brush loosens the debris around nuts/bolts/screws etc.
I made this post so people remember what to have kept in their trucks, these simple tools might come in handy & save you valuable time!
You check under the deck of your mower to see that the cut grass is caked on.
Your mower weighs a few extra pounds, & it's not happy. You need to remove the clogged & caked on grass from under the deck.
What do you do?
****-
What I do:
I lug around a heavy & flat stone. I would tilt the mower so that the handle bar is on the ground, & the blades & deck are seen & easy to work with.
I place my stone onto the handle bar carefully, making sure not to damage my baby. The stone keeps the mower tilted so I don't have to hold or lift it.
I always have a thick wire brush & putty knife. The putty knife enables me to scrape the debris off my mower. The wire brush loosens the debris around nuts/bolts/screws etc.
I made this post so people remember what to have kept in their trucks, these simple tools might come in handy & save you valuable time!