I was surprised to find this out myself! I have a few different Husqvarna tools and do believe they are quality, plus I have a dealer nearby so it’s worth it for me to buy them. Thanks for watching!
Thank you for the feedback and I’m glad it was useful to you! I bought mine as a floor/display model and didn’t get the manual so I thought I’d put this together for others in the same boat.
In my area I have a good Husqvarna dealer so that’s the way I lean. I used to have a good Stihl dealer but they went out of business. Thanks for watching!
Good question. From what I understand most curved shaft weed whackers are made to use string trim only. The motor needs to be a certain size to spin the head with the extra weight of the blade. I hope that helps!
I bought this at a place called Wooster Power Equipment. It’s where I take my things in when I cannot fix it myself. Check out their website. I do not have the part number but it should come up on a description search.
@@scottthornandhisbeesandtrees Extra precaution is always wise. If the guy above wants a skin to metal connection with his saw, all the power to him. I prefer to protect my hand for the woman I do yet have. My cat appreciates it.
Thanks for sharing.
If I had known that Husqvarna did not have manuals available for everything, I would not have purchased from Husqvarna.
I was surprised to find this out myself! I have a few different Husqvarna tools and do believe they are quality, plus I have a dealer nearby so it’s worth it for me to buy them. Thanks for watching!
Thanks. Good video. The Dome towards the ground is very useful. Subscribed.
Thank you for the feedback and I’m glad it was useful to you! I bought mine as a floor/display model and didn’t get the manual so I thought I’d put this together for others in the same boat.
Thank you!
Im glad it was useful for you! Thanks for watching.
Thanks for that. I couldn't find any useful instructions either.
Thank you for watching. I was surprised there was nothing too, and thought maybe it was because this was a floor model.
I agree with the comment, if I’d known there are no parts lists, manuals, or printed instructions available, I would have bought Stihl.
In my area I have a good Husqvarna dealer so that’s the way I lean. I used to have a good Stihl dealer but they went out of business. Thanks for watching!
All the videos seem to use a straight-type weed cutter for brush attachments. Can you do this with a curved shaft weed whacker?
Good question. From what I understand most curved shaft weed whackers are made to use string trim only. The motor needs to be a certain size to spin the head with the extra weight of the blade. I hope that helps!
Where did you find the parts for this. I’m looking everywhere. Do you have a husky part number by chance? Thank You
I bought this at a place called Wooster Power Equipment. It’s where I take my things in when I cannot fix it myself. Check out their website. I do not have the part number but it should come up on a description search.
Thanks for watching!
That lefty righty loosy tighty thing didn't seem to help all that much lol. Anyways, thanks for the tips!
Some days are better than others 😂 Thanks for watching!
Gloves? We don’t need no stinking gloves😂.
😬😂
I bet that knocks through some saplings lol
Both the brush blade and the grass blade do a good job. When it’s mixed brush and grass the better bet is the grass blade. Thanks for watching!
Loose the friggin gloves. You are working on a machine, not moving cement blocks.
I keep the blade pretty sharp so I wear them. It’s a little clunky at times but worth it for me.
@@scottthornandhisbeesandtrees Extra precaution is always wise. If the guy above wants a skin to metal connection with his saw, all the power to him. I prefer to protect my hand for the woman I do yet have. My cat appreciates it.
@@Brandon-eh4tz I agree! I’ve seen (and had) enough hand injuries in my life. Thanks for watching!