Owner | John Loveless | ||
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Owner's Other EVs | 1992 Toyota Pickup - RETIRED 1991 Geo Metro EV --RETIRED | ||
Location | Kaysville, Utah United States map | ||
Web/Email | WebPage | ||
Vehicle | 2007 Black and Decker Corded lawn mower from K-mart (~2007) converted to a battery powered mower. | ||
Motor | Original 154VDC motor | ||
Drivetrain | Direct drive | ||
Controller | None | ||
Batteries | 20, 6.00 Volt, Lead-Acid, Gel Small 4.5Ah 6V batteries. I picked them up from a surplus store called "NPS" for $1.15 each. Some were dead but I resurrected them with my capacitive charger. | ||
System Voltage | 120 Volts | ||
Charger | Home made On-board capacitive charger. A 440V 40uF bi-polar capacitor and a 10 Amp bridge rectifier. Can't get any simpler than that. This works out to a 1/2 amp charger. After a night on the charger, the batteries are full. 9/17/2013: I added more capacitors to the charger so now it can quick charge in under 2 hours. Works great when the lawn is REALLY long and you need a quick boost on the battery to finish the lawn. | ||
Top Speed | 3 MPH ( 4 KPH) Push mower | ||
Range | 1 Miles ( 1 Kilometers) Mow a 1/5th acre lawn 3 weeks in a row on a single charge. Mow a 1/2 acre of lawn on a single charge. I cut it high for a healthier lawn, reduced watering and longer battery range. A dull blade kills the range of the mower. | ||
Watt Hours/Mile | 540 Wh/Mile It takes 540 watt-hours to re-charge the mower after mowing 1/2 acre of lawn. When I used an inverter and 12V battery it took 1380 watt-hours to re-charge the battery. | ||
EV Miles |
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Curb Weight | 55 Pounds (24 Kilograms) Original plastic shell and motor plus a 34 lb battery pack. It's a heavy mower for a push one. But I can use the exercise. | ||
Tires | 6" standard wheels on front. New 7" wheels on back (with bearings). | ||
Conversion Time | ~2007 It took 1 hour to install the inverter and battery. 2011 It took about 3-hours to convert it to a 120VDC system. | ||
Conversion Cost | Inverter and 12V battery cost me about $150. The latest revision to 120VDC only cost $35 | ||
Additional Features | On-board capacitive charger. When the lawn is extra long and the battery runs down faster, or when I just need a break from mowing, I park it by the nearest outlet and plug it in. | ||
Originally this mower was a plug in variety. I added a 12V deep cycle battery and inverter to electrify it. I used it for over 3 years in that configuration. After moving to a larger home on a 1/2 acre lot, I revamped the mower. I removed the inverter and 12V battery, replacing them with 20 six-volt batteries in series. This 120V battery pack feeds the motor directly. It is lighter and works great. I can mow the whole lawn on a single charge. 9/25/2012: Wow! Has it really been 5 years? I love this mower! Measuring with a sound meter, this mower is 15dBA+ quieter than a gas mower. I like to mow at night when it's cool outside and nobody else is awake to distract me from finishing the lawn. It's so quiet that none of my neighbors hear it. You hardly can hear it from inside my own house. It doesn't disturb anyone. Now I just need some night-vision goggles so I don't have to use a head-lamp ;) 6/15/2013: Had to replace 5 bad batteries. This helped a lot but the rest of the pack is showing signs of age and abuse too. When the lawn is really thick, I have to take a break and charge up to finish the job. Experimented with a small 2Ah 120V LiPo pack that I hastily soldered together. It was super light but it only lasted 10 minutes and got hot. Back to the original lead-acid cells. 9/17/2013: Made it through its 6th mowing season. Still going strong. I am amazed at what a sharp blade does for performance. 5/2014: Had to replace most of the battery cells. Found them for $1.29 each at NPS. It's a new mower now. We also removed a huge part of our back lawn to make it into a garden. Less lawn to mow makes me happy. |