- Q: Does this thing really work, or is it a model?
- A: Yes, it is an ideal tool for dethatching, and also
works very well for raking in many different applications. It
greatly reduces the amount of time you will spend cleaning up
your yard-- especially on areas formerly too large to do by hand.
- Q: Alright, you've made your sales pitch. Now, tell
me, does it really work?
- A: We've been getting this question for more than 15
years: from the first rake sold to the tens of thousands sold
since that initial unit. The feedback we have gotten talking
to people at shows, state fairs, and from the dealers we work
with is that this unit excels at dethatching (industry term
for 'pulling up dead grass') and works as a very effective raking
tool for grass, as well as many kinds of debris. Thousands of
units ship out our doors just before springtime, as the Estate
Rake™ is
an invaluable time-saving tool for spring cleaning of your yard.
- Q: How does it work?
- A: First, adjust the angle adjustment bar on the hitch:
put it in the front-most hole for raking dead grass,
the rear-most hole for raking at the widest working width (mostly
used for dense leaves). Next, squeeze the handle on the
height adjustment lever in front to loosen up the cable, and
then lower the rake wheel arms down until the rake wheels touch
the ground. Add weight if you need it, and you're off. The Estate
Rake™ rakes
up debris, pushing it inward into piled-up rows.
- Q: What powers the rake wheels?
- A: The rake is 'ground-driven.' As you pull it, the
forward motion rotates
the wheels. When you stop, so does the rake.
- Q: Will it pull up dead grass?
- A: Yes. Very effectively.
- Q: It pulls up dead grass, but what happens to
the healthy grass? Is it damaged?
- A: Very good question. The rake and the raking wheels
are specially designed to pull up dead grass while
leaving healthy, greening grass conditioned and unharmed. Raking
angle and tine spacing are very important for this to work the
way it does. See next question for instructions on how to dethatch.
- Q: So what is the best way to dethatch?
- A: Put 3-4 bricks in each weight box (or approximately
15lbs. of weight) and rake at the most aggressive angle...
that is, put the angle adjustment bar in the hole closest to
the front of the rake. This angle helps the wheels grab the dead
grass and push it quickly into rows. We have used one at our
office many times and it works well on a consistent basis.
- Q: How effectively does it rake leaves?
- A: The more leaves you have to rake, the better.
Leaves and other yard debris will be raked most effectively along
with grass clippings. The rake's effectiveness depends
on the size of the debris and conditions of the yard.
- Q: Specifically, will it rake twigs and sticks?
- A: It will miss some of them, but the
more grass there is, the better the rake will pick up twigs
and sticks.
- Q: What are the silver boxes on top of the frame?
- A: These are the weight boxes, sized to hold bricks,
weights, antifreeze containers, etc. For dethatching your yard
you will want to put weight on each side.
- Q: Will it rake pine straw?
- A: Yes.
- Q: Will it rake acorns?
- A: Yes and no. If there is a large quantity of
grass being raked up at the same time, then yes. Otherwise the
tines are not spaced closely enough to rake acorns by themselves.
If the tines were spaced closer together, the rake would be far
less effective while raking and dethatching grass, which is the
purpose of the Estate Rake™.
- Q: Will it rake pine needles?
- A: Yes, the rake does very well with longer needles
(3'' and up), but short needles are difficult if you are not
raking them with a lot of grass. Raking grass along with debris
always gives the best results because the debris will ''stick''
in the grass. Down in Georgia they use the rake for raking
long pine needles, then they bale them up and mulch them into
garden beds.
- Q: Will it rake hay?
- A: No. It will not rake hay. The rake is not large
enough. We distribute a larger 8' rake that runs on hydraulics
for raking hay behind a small tractor. It is in our products
catalog:
Estate Rake ER-62.
- Q: What if I break a rake tooth or rake wheel?
- A: Purchase a bundle of individual replacement teeth,
or buy a complete rake wheel as a replacement. Refer to the parts
breakdown in your manual for part numbers.
- Q: Does it come in different colors and sizes?
- A: The Estate Rake is available in two colors: red
or green. It is only available in one size. See specs for
further information.
- Q: Is it difficult to assemble?
- A: With the instructions handy and a few simple tools,
the rake should take roughly 45 to 60 minutes to put together.
- Q: I want to store it in my shed, does it disassemble
for easy storage?
- A: Yes, in just a couple of minutes. Slacken the cable
all the way and then unhook the cable loops from each arm. Pull
out the pin that holds each arm on the frame, and you can lift the arms
right off. Collapse the frame angle all the way and tuck all three pieces
away in the corner.
- Q: Can I pull it behind my riding lawn mower and rake as I cut?
- A: Now you've got it. Pull it behind a riding lawn
mower and you rake as you mulch. It works best in short, freshly cut grass.
- Q: How do I pick up the piled-up rows that it makes?
- A: Our salesman recommends raking in a gradual circular
pattern instead of back-and-forth rows. You will end up with
one row in the center of your yard instead of several long rows
to pick up. If there's a lot of debris, you will have to pick
up the pile when the debris gets too high/thick to rake. Alternately,
a lawn vacuum works well.
- Q: Can I rake my beachfront to catch seaweed, sticks, driftwood, trash, etc.?
- A: While mainly targeted at raking yard debris, we
have been told by customers that they have used the rake on beaches,
and that they were very satisfied with its performance. You will
have to adjust the raking angle to your liking and experiment
with weight in the weight boxes, but it definitely reduces time
spent raking by hand.
- Other questions? Send us an email using the "Contact Us" button below.
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