Nothing that wouldn’t be obvious to a first time user. I was hoping you would have info oh how to till. The machine quickly stops in a spot and churns it up thoroughly and it needs to be wrestled forward. Looking for guidance on how to find the happy middle between skipping over the surface and churning in place
This is what a local rental company rents out. Looks like a lot of work to hold it back. I can till all day with one hand, leaving no footprints behind my old Troy bilt tiller.
Hello...thanks for this video as I just rented this model tiller for the weekend. Not sure if you happen to check these comments since this was posted 7 years ago, but I'll put it out there in cyberspace for any advice. I got this idea to have a front lawn instead of the PNW moss that takes over lawns here that are under big Doug-fir trees. So I did a preliminary scalping of the moss and got this hare brained idea to rent a rototiller to churn up my soil since it looked fairly compacted. So I am almost 70, and this thing was getting away from me today. I could barely hang on to it. I realize there is a difference from your video where you are tilling a garden. Do I need to lean back more on the drag bar to anchor it and slow it down? Otherwise, I was looking to jury rig a harness of some sort so my body can hold it back. Best regards
At 2:00 this video says tilling depth is 10-12 inches. How can this be if the tine diameter is 13 inches per Honda? Most tillers will bottom on the tine center axle. Are you using some kind of aftermarket tines? Note that for my gardening needs 5-6 inches tilling depth is usually enough.
What on earth is a section captain? Where is the tiller being returned to? If this is a private video for a rental company it would be nice to have it explained in the title.
Thank you for a nice video, but the lower you set the depth gauge, the shallower the tilling depth will be,,,If you would like to till deep, raise the depth gauge to the top of the adjustment potential. This looks like a VERY difficult machine to operate.
Thomas Gronek No, he was correct. The deeper the bar is set (tge lower it is) the deeper the machine will till. This is because of drag. They really aren't difficult to operate at all.
I'm sorry but you lost me in under 2 minutes. Stop being a douche. If your video is about DONT do this and DONT do that it's not about the tiller. It's about YOU being fed up with repair cost on rental equipment.