Sun Joe TJ604E 16 Pollici 13,5 AMP Motocoltivatore Elettrico da Giardino, Nero Verde/Nero 13,5 Amp Motocoltivatore e Coltivatore

Brand:Sun Joe

3.7/5

502.92

[TI ABBIAMO COPERTO!]: Il tuo nuovo timone e coltivatore è supportato dalla promessa del cliente Snow Joe e Sun Joe. Garantiremo i prodotti nuovi e alimentati per due anni dalla data di acquisto. Nessuna domanda chiesta. Contatta l'assistenza clienti di snow Joe e Sun Joe al numero 1-866-766-9563 per ulteriore assistenza. [REGOLABILE]: regolazione della ruota a 3 posizioni. [FACILE STOCCAGGIO]: gestire le pieghe per un comodo stoccaggio e un facile trasporto. [DUREVOLE]: 6 denti angolati in acciaio per la massima durata e prestazioni. [POTENTE]: il motore da 13,5 A coltiva fino a 16 pollici di larghezza x 8 pollici di profondità.

[TI ABBIAMO COPERTO!]: Il tuo nuovo timone e coltivatore è supportato dalla promessa del cliente Snow Joe e Sun Joe. Garantiremo i prodotti nuovi e alimentati per due anni dalla data di acquisto. Nessuna domanda chiesta. Contatta l'assistenza clienti di snow Joe e Sun Joe al numero 1-866-766-9563 per ulteriore assistenza. [REGOLABILE]: regolazione della ruota a 3 posizioni. [FACILE STOCCAGGIO]: gestire le pieghe per un comodo stoccaggio e un facile trasporto. [DUREVOLE]: 6 denti angolati in acciaio per la massima durata e prestazioni. [POTENTE]: il motore da 13,5 A coltiva fino a 16 pollici di larghezza x 8 pollici di profondità.
Brand Sun Joe
Color Green/Black
Item Dimensions LxWxH 21 x 17.88 x 17.67 inches
Material Alloy Steel
Power Source Corded Electric

3.7

7 Review
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Scritto da: Matthew John
Steak knife on butter vs Styrofoam noodle on sourdough
This is a fairly detailed first impressions review with knowledge of strengths and weaknesses and tips to keep it up in order. I started assembling this. It took 5 minutes. I then took it to the worse part of my yard.. My father had dumped a bunch of gravel in the poorly draining clay river soil so he could park his car almost 10 years ago. He passed away, so I'm cleaning it up. Working with the machine: I started by testing it on some good rich black dirt that was worn a path in it. It did fine. Perfect. It tore thru roots in 3 seconds. Then I did the gravel.. It couldn't bite very easy so I did what another reviewer said and put a weight on it (a flat 1" thick 2' marble square slab up against the arms behind the green motor head) It weighed it down considerably, no more kicking n spitting little nothings out. It began digging nice n steady.. I had started pushing it but found pulling it works much better.. It took about 10 minutes to do 3 rows 4" deep and I am impressed. That work wouldn't been literal back breaking bone shaking joint rattling pain inducing with a hoe n shovel over a whole day with a 3 day rest halfway thru.i know this from experience. It was like slicing warm butter with a steak knife vs slicing 3 month old dried soughdough bread with a Styrofoam swimming noodle. I then took it up front to start releveling my yard and improving its conditions.. It took me about an hour and half of tilling the area shown in the picture, about 6feet wide to 11feet wide and about 15feet long. [The picture is of after sowing the seed and throwing 1" of topsoil.. original tilling went down 4"-10".] It is so strong an old clay brick got stuck jammed in between the blades and the metal cover. It probably wouldn't have happened if I didn't have that marble slab on it still so I took that off. I used a hammer and railroad nail to get the brick out. It then spit stones a hands breath in size like sunflower seeds. No more jamming. I'd recommend only laying a weight on top when you know exactly what's in your ground. If it's gravel, small knuckle sized stones with a few larger stones it should be fine, but if the area was once a brickyard, coal breaker, industrial zone etc etc, go easy with the thing. Let it toss itself up. The main reason you buy these things is to gofrom breaking your body doing the work the good Ole fashion way to the way of modern convenience. Remember that... it's still work. Just 80% easier. It ain't supposed to be smooth as breathing in your sleep. The machine itself: The wheels are one of 2 shoddy parts of this machine. So you better go easy on them.. though they'll be easy to replace because the wheel brace is nice Quality metal. My big peeve and eye to the people who designed and built this is about the trigger, power button.. OH MY GOSH ITS SO HORRIBLE I CANT KEEP THE THING COMPRESSED FOR 5 MINUTES WITHOUT GETTING WRIST PAIN. It's just so abysmally placed.. THE ANGLES ARE ALL WRONG!!!! I just HATE it. They could have put the safety on the inner left, near the thumb and the power trigger on the outer right and had probably the single best power mechanism on the market BUT NOOOOO... they HAD to put it in such a way as to cause a pain that starts in the hand, moves to the wrist, then takes over the entire forearm. You can get around it by constantly grabbing it with the meat of your hand though.. and that's what I ended up doing.. Like I was grabbing my mate in the rump, right between thighs and glutes.. the eager beaver man's grip. It just doesn't make sense because the thing is so light you naturally want to use your fingertips and just let it glide... By gosh that freaking trigger is the reason why this thing should NEVER sell for more than the $88 I paid. If they made an ergonomic grip power trigger switch I'd gladly pay $100+.. I would. I'd buy it again and give this one away free just for that... that's how HORRIBLE THE TRIGGER SWITCH IS ON THIS. MOVING ON. I was worried that the frame around the blades was plastic and would chip n break pieces contaminating my garden It's not. It's metal painted with a fairly thick matte paint. The motor housing on top is a rubberized plastic though. I don't mind that as much because the motor shouldn't be getting any rust falling into it as it ages. The blades are nice but beware. Bricks and large wide thick rocks may get stuck. Long grasses, vines and such will end up wrapping around the drive shaft. It's easy to remove though. I recommend checking it every 15 minutes or so and of course mowing your lawn before use. The arms of the thing are kinda dainty.. Not cheap, drop a brick on it and breaks cheap.. but cheap after a solid use period (maybe 2 or 3 seasons) with twistings and what not cheap.. (or throw a brick at it like a baseball and dent it right up reducing structural integrity by half) I could see them bending pretty bad and probably cracking during first use after only a few months of rust exposure (paint wearing off exposing the metal underneath). You'll need to really keep up on the paint around joints, along seams and at the base. Frankly an extra millimeter of metal would have gone a long way to reducing maintenance and improving structural integrity for this thing. That's how close to the cusp of moderately cheap and not worth spitting on cheap the arms are on this thing. Maybe bracing with hose clamps and a few thin rods might help.. maybe not.. who knows how they'll hold up? I do know if you don't paint it every year or two it's surely a goner in 3. Still, with all that said I'm sure I'll get thru my 1/4 acre yard and sowing my winter rye fairly easily. Even with all the coal, clay, gravel and roots.
Scritto da: Troy
My 3rd SunJoe item - love all 3
I own a SunJoe lawn dethatcher/scarifier, an extension pole saw that you can remove the pole and have about a 13 amp 8" chain saw (it's awesome and then some). So, I decided this was a perfect tool to add for minor landscaping. Like the other two items, this had ample power to do the job without a hint of stress on the electric motor. It was easy enough to control, although I should have taken down the lattice first. I was going to try and just till down about 2 inches, but this thing was so easy to use it was difficult not to go down 6-8 inches or more. I'd allow the tiller to go forward a bit, then pull backwards and it dug into the soil with ease. I went back and forth a few times to really loosen the soil in our front flowerbed. Then I stood back and leveled the soil the best I could, and then used a 4x4 to pack the soil back in case it rained. Just like the dethatcher and pole saw, this worked very well. I cannot stress enough how important it is to use the correct size extension cord. Take the dethatcher for example. I follow a guy on YouTube that does professional landscaping and he wanted to make a video about this SunJoe dethatcher and aside from the very undersized catch bag, he loved this. He used it on several lawns in a professional manner, than started loaning it out to anybody and everybody in the area that wanted to use it. It worked flawlessly until #15. He left the dethatcher out on the driveway with the correctly rated extension cord. When he got home, the person took the dethatcher and left the extension cord, and the tool came back with a burnt out motor. I have a degree in electronics and I can tell you with a high degree of certainty that the person used an extension cord that was not rated for the 13.5 amps and burned the motor out. The extension pole saw...equally amazing. We had a hardwood tree in our back yard that was dying, and parts of the limbs were dead on the ends, and hanging over places like the shed, fence, and neighbor's shed and swing, so I had to remove the limbs carefully. My neighbor came over to give me a hand and with ropes and cuts and pulling, we were able to bring down the limbs without damage to anything besides dents in the lawn. He said he'd come back the following day with a gas chain saw to help cut the rest of the tree up. He went to borrow his dads chain saw, but it wasn't running at the time so he went and bought at 45cc Craftsman gas powered chainsaw. This 45cc gas chainsaw bogged down repeatedly, so once he had to leave, I pulled the SunJoe saw back out and went to work. The SJ saw never showed any stress with the cuts, even when I was using the 8" bar to cut through 14" hardwood making long cuts. Judging by the number of times I've refilled the bar oil lube container, I've probably used the saw for 5-6 hours of non-stop cutting time. That saw is a little beast. If the motor on this tiller is equal to those other two, this tiller will be powerful enough to do any job you need. It's not as big or heavy as a gas powered unit, but it's so much easier to use. Throw in the hassle of renting one at a big box store, the wait, the paperwork, loading, driving home, cleaning up, returning, waiting, unloading, etc. This little tiller is a great investment. If you're going to use this for tilling anything of decent size, be sure to do so after a rain or after watering the ground. Trying to till compacted and dry soil is tough. I tilled my 5,000 sq. ft. front yard with a big box rental tiller and made the mistake of doing it compact and dry soil, and the tines just skipped over the surface kicking up dust. It was a big learning lesson...
Scritto da: miafrate
This should be called Sunbeast. It’s hungry.
This tiller is amazing. I was sceptical at first but once it arrived I opened the box and assembled it which took a couple minutes I thought there is no way this could tackle anything more than tilling a sandbox with loose sand. Well I was shocked when I plugged it in and squeezed the trigger. This thing tore through my garden in no time and did a better job than a gas powered tiller 5 times the size. Since it did such a great job on the garden I figured I’d try flowerbeds which have never been turned over, this tiller just tore through it like a hot knife through butter. Then I figured time for the ultimate test, I was going to rent a gas powered rear tine tiller to do my backyard so I can level and reseed the lawn but figured I’ll see what this bad boy can do. I am blown away. This thing chewed through the grass, the rock hard Canadian clay and ripped a million rocks out from the ground. Some of them 12-16” in size. It made short work of my entire backyard and my back isn’t killing me from fighting with a larger gas powered tiller. When I was done I picked this thing up with 1 hand and put it neatly in the corner of my shed and wrapped up the cord and just stared at the backyard and was in complete shock at how well this small electric tiller did on 2500 sqft of backyard. I can’t wait for the spring so I can pull this thing out and attack my garden again. Would be great if there was a weight attachment that can be added to help pull it down into the soil but other than that I’m blown away. Don’t think twice about buying this monster.
Scritto da: YU H
Not for EU countries!
Opening the package everything was jumbled around. I noticed that there was a supplied 500w 120v to 230v transformer in the box. This is not suitable as by my calculations this rotates it requires at least over 1600watts. A small inverter would not be powerful enough to run the rotavator. It's also a point of failure. I don't see it lasting very long. If you're from the UK / euro I would avoid buying this. We've started the return process. We're very disappointed as it was a long wait for delivery.
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Very powerful - really works
I used to work with a motorized cultivator (30 years old). I did not like it. This one is electric, but has a powerful motor and thin blades that makes it really powerful. I used it in my garden with hard earth and many rocks, works better than expected and definitely better than my old motorized cultivator. I tried it on my grass, just to see how powerful it is. Result: I was able in couple of minutes to get a new place to put flowers. Device is very quiet and light, but makes a lot of dust.Only problem I have it that rock, from time to time get stuck between the blades. I highly recommend it. - Update after two years of use (little less than 2 years) - Plastic handles broke after a year. Replaced them with metal bar Differential broke after 1,5 year of usage. Let's see if it will be warrantied. I take bets... Bottom line: + Motor is nice, quiet and powerful - Everything around the motor is cheap not built to last, like to many modern appliances and tools. To be tested: Snow Joe customer service. More details to come.
Scritto da: Curtis Aikens
This is a feisty little dragon!
Used this little monster to break up an 11' diameter circle of very healthy lawn as the Vice-President of Life ordered a flower bed to be emplaced. This little tool (and it's so small, it's bordering "cute") worked like a hot damn - but there are limitations. The advantage of this being a very small, very light tiller is a disadvantage when breaking well-grown grass and/or areas with thicker roots. When doing the breaking, it bounces all over the place and really isn't all that effective if you let it move it's natural forward direction. What I found however, is that if you hold it in spot for a bit to do some digging/initial breaking, then PULL BACKWARDS AGAINST THE ROTATION, it will cut up against the sod and it works pretty well. It's still pretty light though and any substantial roots will have it bouncing. Just ease it off and come at it again. If the root is getting to the 1/2" size, stop and take it out with an axe or spade instead. With it bouncing around like that, it's hard to keep the trigger all the way depressed - but that's a safety feature I wouldn't remove, just would have preferred a palm switch over a trigger finger one to make it easier. After "backing up" over the whole area (and yes, there's a heck of a bicep workout there) and the core sod broken (and raked clear), I set it a incrementally deeper and let it go forward - holding back in areas that needed more attention. The unit is so light that it'll happily "walk over" areas of strong resistance (and more roots.) When encountering those, I just pulled back over top of them (just like "vacuuming the bed") and the reverse-cutting motion did the job. If I had a full-size, gas-powered rototiller, the job would have been quicker and with less arm work. Having said that, I don't want or need that kind of beast and now that this areas is broken up, I can use it at leisure next spring. The thing is zero-maintenance and so light it's quite easy to store. Just needs a little manual effort to convince it (really hold it back) in the tough areas. I haven't looked at seeing if I can selectively take tines out for ultra-thin tilling - maybe next year. It's only 16" as it is though, so likely not necessary. Having to manage the electrical cord was a bit of a minor pain - but still far less than gas, oil, and seasonal maintenance. Definitely a recommended buy for smaller gardens, flower beds and places where you just can't justify getting the heavy duty equipment.
Scritto da: Fanfan
Did not disappoint.
I used this in a yard with hard soil mixed with a lot of 2" rocks. I'm very happy with how it performed. I'd never used a tiller before and had low expectations for this machine, thinking that it may not work as well as shown in the Youtube videos - possibly the machine wouldn't be powerful enough or my backyard was especially hard and rocky. Within the first 15 seconds I was already pleasantly surprised at how well this thing churned up the soil and didn't seem to have problems with the fairly large rocks pervasive in the yard. The only time the tiller got stuck on a rock was with a huge 4" one which stalled the motor. I took the handle of a broom and knocked it out, and there was no damage or problems from it. Very happy with the purchase.

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