- Joined
- Jan 18, 2016
- Messages
- 5,694
Not hunting related and we're starting to use this as podium for politics.
We are further down the hill on the west coast, but Colorado is trying to catch up in a hurry. It’s crazy how fast things can go sideways in a state when the momentum shifts a certain wayI'm so glad I didn't take the opportunity 6ish years ago and moved to Denver for the company I worked for at the time. That state is starting to go down hill faster than the west coast.
If you are that guy... make sure your batteries are fully charged firstFair warning don't be the guy that takes this into the weeds.
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Every new lithium battery powered piece of lawn care equipment should come with a picture of the lithium mine it came from on the box.Nope.
The rule applies from June to August. During this time, state agencies will not be allowed to use gas-powered lawn equipment with engines of 25 horsepower or less.
It's for weed whackers and small mowers. Small 2- and 4-stroke engines contribute way more to pollution/poor air quality (which is a big problem in the Denver area) than most people realize. The state wanted to improve air quality but didn't want to force something on private citizens (that probably wouldn't get passed anyway). So instead it mandated that it will reduce its OWN usage of this equipment.
25+hp engines, especially older ones, do tend to run pretty dirty, but there are way less of them in use than there are gas-powered weed whackers, and especially with diesels, you can improve air quality almost as much with better fuel as you can with any other method. So if you care about air quality, they're not a useful target for improvement (right now).
It also makes a ton of sense because these engines also have short lifetimes so they get replaced at regular interval and auctioned off already, so people can't even really complain it's going to raise equipment purchase costs (by much anyway - electric tools do cost more, but also have longer lifetimes so that's probably a wash.)
This is a good bill being made fun of because of the click-bait headline.