Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Help, have new 2012 Honda HS928 have questions.
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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New_Yorker
Preach the Gospel always, use words when necessary
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Nov 26, 2010
Points: 219
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Re: Help, have new 2012 Honda HS928 have questions.
Reply #39 Nov 13, 2011 11:04 am |
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You bought a $ 3000.00 Snowblower, and Obviously did not read and understand the Owners Manual. Once the engine is running the transmission engages by the simple movement of the forward and reverse control lever, PROVIDING that you have placed the transmission lever located between the handles and almost underneath the back of the machine in the "ENGAGE", and Not The "DIS-ENGAGE" position. I use a broom handle to move that lever. Once you do this the transmission requires no additional " Understanding " as it will be maintenance free beyond the very RARE addition of fluid when it eventually needs some, which is not very often. The owners manual is written so anyone can understand the operation of the machine, perhaps read it a few times with a friend till you understand what it tells you.
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Whoha
Location: Minneapolis
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 35
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Re: Help, have new 2012 Honda HS928 have questions.
Reply #41 Nov 13, 2011 1:30 pm |
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You bought a $ 3000.00 Snowblower, and Obviously did not read and understand the Owners Manual. Once the engine is running the transmission engages by the simple movement of the forward and reverse control lever, PROVIDING that you have placed the transmission lever located between the handles and almost underneath the back of the machine in the "ENGAGE", and Not The "DIS-ENGAGE" position. I use a broom handle to move that lever. Once you do this the transmission requires no additional " Understanding " as it will be maintenance free beyond the very RARE addition of fluid when it eventually needs some, which is not very often. The owners manual is written so anyone can understand the operation of the machine, perhaps read it a few times with a friend till you understand what it tells you. What PLANET are you on? Read the owners manual before buying, I am not "professor ANAL and smart BY A HALF" It is a snowblower. I am very mechanically inclined, I had a business for some time as an Audi mechanic/owner. I can wire and plumb a house in code, so BUYING a snowblower without reading the owners manual seems ok to ME. Yes, it was a surprised that the Honda engineers could be so inept in their transmission design. Common design logic would dictate that you would not want to ADD a step to your hands while powering a snowblower. Common design logic would also dictate to use a bleeder valve to NOT to produce an instant on scenario that would be hard on the trans. How common 2-stage snowblowers work is time tested, adding another step that gives you operational LESS CONTROL and calling it BETTER is ASININE. Who cares if it is a Honda or an Apple computer with great design thought instilled into their products. A Lexus with a CV style transmission that you would always have to have one hand on to advance your speed from the center console, INSTEAD of the foot pedal is a bad design even though it is a Lexus. And being a fanboy defending a illogical design flaw seems DUMB to me. No need to get pissed at me, it is just my opinion, and I disagree with others that this IS a design flaw. Like I said I will get use to it. Yamaha doesn't sell in the USA and Yamaha only makes track drive now. I don't like track drives. So Honda is the next choice even if it is flawed.
This message was modified Nov 13, 2011 by Whoha
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