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On Mon May 27 21:26:40 2024 Frank Krygowski wrote:Sorry, I don't see where you said that. Your initial statement was this: "... it was sucked into the blades..." and then you began spinning tales of large aerodynamic forces.I'm with Zen on this. I've been mowing lawns (reluctantly, when I can'tWhy don't you invent something else that I supposedly said? What I ACTUALLY said is that I tilted the mower by hitting a patch of heavy grass, the bag which is very poorly connected slipped into the blades which pulled the bag in with the mechanical force of the motor.
hire a teenager to do it) for at least sixty years. I've never seen
suction sufficient to draw a mower bag into the blades.
>
I think it's more likely you simply ran over the bag, not looking where
you were going. I suppose that's how you lost your toe to the mower as
well.
>
(True story, folks.)
And as no surprise you feel the need to lie about by severed toe which was from a lawn mower with a side attached bag. The mower hit a rock hidden by the long grass, rotated front down and rear up and I stepped directly into the moving blades.Whatever, Tom. We've long since learned that almost everything you say spouts from your imagination. The true part of that story is, apparently, that you did manage to cut your toe off. Only a tiny percentage of people have been that clumsy, careless, uncoordinated, stupid or whatever.
Tell us all Frank, WHAT inflates the grass catcher bag and how does that work? You seem to be an expert on all these things and claim that the mower blades are not designed as an aerodynamic propeller to lift the grass up for an even trim.Actually, I never said that. To this point, I haven't taken a position on aerodynamic lift of grass blades. But I don't believe there is very much suction into the perimeter of a mower deck.
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