Totally :)I bought this last November when Stihl had a big sale. Before handing it over to me the shop mechanic took it to their workshop at back for pre-sale check. I was chatting with the sales guy when I heard its engine go in full. That was awesome!I owned two other basic line trimmers (the cheapest at shop kind, you know) and hated both. The first one wasn't powerful enough and kept jamming. Second one was a beast of thing to start and its starter cord eventually broke. This one has an easy-to-start system, lots of power and better balanced easy to use design.
I always have problems with these things when the orihinal line wears out, I never seem to be able to put on a new line and get it to work properly.. :irked:
Then you'd love Stihl. All you need to do is cut new line into required length, push the end of each line piece into each hole in the head and twist the head round'n round until the line is wound up into the head. It's so easy!
That will get the little blighters :knight:
Totally :)I bought this last November when Stihl had a big sale. Before handing it over to me the shop mechanic took it to their workshop at back for pre-sale check. I was chatting with the sales guy when I heard its engine go in full. That was awesome!I owned two other basic line trimmers (the cheapest at shop kind, you know) and hated both. The first one wasn't powerful enough and kept jamming. Second one was a beast of thing to start and its starter cord eventually broke. This one has an easy-to-start system, lots of power and better balanced easy to use design.
I always have problems with these things when the orihinal line wears out, I never seem to be able to put on a new line and get it to work properly.. :irked:
Then you'd love Stihl. All you need to do is cut new line into required length, push the end of each line piece into each hole in the head and twist the head round'n round until the line is wound up into the head. It's so easy!
That sounds good..