When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: pull behind finish lawn mower

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Edwin Beard Budding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Beard_Budding

    A cylinder (reel) mower from 1888 showing a fixed cutting blade in front of the rear roller and wheel-driven rotary blades. Budding had the idea of the lawnmower after seeing a machine in a local cloth mill that used a cutting cylinder (or bladed reel) mounted on a bench to trim the irregular nap from the surface of woolen cloth and give a smooth finish. [2]

  3. Lawn mower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawn_mower

    Smaller mowers often lack any form of self-propulsion, requiring human power to move over a surface; "walk-behind" mowers are self-propelled, requiring a human only to walk behind and guide them. Larger lawn mowers are usually either self-propelled "walk-behind" types or, more often, are "ride-on" mowers that the operator can sit on and control.

  4. Gravely Tractor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravely_Tractor

    Gravely, of Brillion, Wisconsin, is a manufacturer of powered lawn and garden implements which it describes as "walk-behind, zero turn and outfront mowers". [1] It started as a manufacturer of "walk-behind" or two-wheel tractors.

  5. Mower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mower

    Reel mowers, also called cylinder mowers [2] (familiar as the hand-pushed or self-powered cylinder lawn mower), have a horizontally rotating cylindrical reel composed of helical blades, each of which in turn runs past a horizontal cutter-bar, producing a continuous scissor action. The bar is held at an adjustable level just above the ground and ...

  6. Brush hog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brush_hog

    Two archetypes of this type of mower are the Bush Hog which is made by Bush Hog, Inc. [1] of Selma, Alabama, and the Flex-Wing by RhinoAg of Gibson City, Illinois.The formal name for this type of implement is a rotary cutter or rotary mower, although it differs from mowers in that it does not cut with a sharp blade, but rather severs with an intentionally very dull wedge-like blade.

  7. Dethatcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dethatcher

    Bottom side of an electric lawn scarifier showing rotating metal blades. Scarification or de-thatching of lawns or turf is a mechanical process whereby the surface and subsurface of the lawn, green or sports pitch is rigorously abraded by penetrating metal blades, tines or prongs.