WORX ECO WG780 19-Inch, A good mower and a good..
| Overall Rating | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|
A good mower and a good green option
So far this has been a great mower, it is easy to push and works well. It came basically fully assembled, all you have to do is tighten the knobs for the handle. The battery appears to hold a charge for the listed time, maybe more. And one key point to me is the battery is removable to be charged, unlike the Black and Decker where the battery has to be charged in the mower. I will try and update this over time to comment on how the battery holds up over time. The design is wonderful and with the safety key you should never have a problem with it turning on unwanted. It mulches well too. It is also very quiet, probably 1/3 to 1/2 as loud as a gas mower. Overall everything is easy and appears good so far, we’ll see how it holds up over time.
Update (5/19/2012):
The featured review for this product, WORX ECO WG780 19-Inch 24-Volt Cordless Electric Lawn Mower Lawn & Patio Jul 7, 2008, was written by Justin513ac.
The average rating for this item is out of 5 stars, according to 3 reviews.
- Related posts on black and decker
- Black & Decker TROS1000 Spacemaker Oven | Home Appliances at VNG
- Black and Decker VPX Cordless Hand Vacuum with Cyclonic Action …
- Black And Decker 20 Amp 14 Sheet Sander Qs900 | Monte Sarafin
- Related posts on cordless
- Black and Decker VPX Cordless Hand Vacuum with Cyclonic Action …
- Cordless phone replacement batteries for your favorite household …
- Cordless Speakerphone Answering Machine | MMDC Studio and Sound System
Related posts:
- Black & Decker MM675, heavier than I thought, but..
- Black & Decker MM275, It’ll cut your grass just..
- Black & Decker MB-850, Black & Decker Cordless..
- WG202 WORX 22-Inch, Worx really works
- Dirt Devil M0216CHM Kurv, Dirt Devil Kurv - Deserves..
Tags: battery, black and decker, cordless, cordless china junk, cordless electric mower, cordless lawn mower, cordless mower, eco, electric lawn mower, electric mower, green 3, lawn mower, mower, mulcher, save the planet, worx, worx eco cordless electric lawn mower, worx eco wg780, worx electric lawn mower
Posted on: May 25, 2010
Filed under: Reviews

Reviews (3)
Justin513ac
May 11th, 2010 at 2:02 pm
A good mower and a good green option
Rated 5 stars.
John Elliott
May 11th, 2010 at 2:53 pm
TREMENDOUS - and I’ve got pictures to prove it!
PICTURES: http://maurinewatkins.com/worx.htm
We’d really let the lawn go. When we tried to use our old Craftsman 6.0 gas lawnmower, it made noises like ball bearings were spinning around inside the engine. And, of course, it spat out a horrid amount of smoke. Seemed like the time to finally consider going green.
After much online research and then thoroughly checking out the items we could find locally (the sales people were truly surprised at just how thoroughly we went about this!), we decided on the Worx Eco.
Before I started to cut the worst of the grass, I had one of my daughters hold a tape measure so we could see just how high the worst tufts of lawn were (22 to 28 inches!). Then I mowed a swath and took more pictures.
The mower never choked on any of the grass, though there were times it did slow way down; when that happened, I backed off a bit and let the blade spin up to speed before going forward again. The mower never stalled.
I went back over it at my preferred height and now the lawn looks great. I’ve been able to mow our entire yard three times and the battery still shows full on its one charge.
I couldn’t be happier.
–John Elliott, Albany, Oregon
Suzanne Demitrio
May 23rd, 2010 at 4:50 pm
Terrific mower!
Our old gas mower keeled over halfway through the lawn last weekend … and then it rained every day all week. By Saturday, the grass was sopping wet and ankle deep.
We unpacked the Worx cordless mower from the box and - wow! - it gobbled through that grass! It cuts beautifully, neat and even, and the motor doesn’t complain even when you run over sticks (not that you are supposed to run over sticks, but sometimes it happens). The mulching function makes the clippings literally invisible.
We knew we wanted a cordless electric mower. There are half a dozen choices on the market now; this is one of the more expensive ones, but it’s worth it. As other reviews have noted, it’s very thoughtfully designed. There’s no assembly needed - it unfolds ready-to-go out of the box (and folds back down, with the squeeze of a lever, for storage). Yes, it’s 80 pounds, but the better gas mowers are up there too, and great ergonomics mean you won’t strain yourself pushing it. At 5′0″, I particularly appreciated the height-adjustable handle and easy-to-hold deadman switch. The grass height adjuster is a giant joystick, easy to see and reach. It starts instantly with the push of a button - get used to just letting go rather than letting it idle when you stop to think or sneeze; it’s not like a gas mower where you worry about starting it up again. It’s so quiet you can hear your iPod over it, and best of all - you smell nothing but sweet cut grass.
One great virtue of this model is that it has a removable battery. That means you can charge the battery indoors, if your mower lives in an unelectrified shed. It also means that the battery can winter indoors, where it will be safer and last longer. If you have acres and acres of lawn, you could even buy a second battery and swap it out when the first is spent. The battery compartment is well-designed and easy to access; the battery has a carrying handle (it’s heavy!) and a connector that snaps on in only one way. It’s just like charging your cell phone, only bigger.
The battery has a charge indicator - full, halfway, and empty. Our house sits on a ~7000 square foot lot. I mowed all the grass, front and back, and the indicator light went from full to half. (I don’t know if it really started out tippy-top full, though, because I didn’t charge it - I just unpacked and mowed). The ad copy says it’ll go 17,500 square feet per charge. From what I’ve seen so far, I’m not worried.
The downside: the manual is confusing. It talks about a “mulching attachment”, but really you mulch by leaving the only provided attachment off, not by putting it on. And of course it would be even better if cordless lawnmowers used NiCad batteries rather than lead acid (longer life, less pollution, much less heavy), but no manufacturer’s doing that yet.
Leave a reply