• scsi@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Cost might be prohibitive to do that now but in time

    I was being subtle in addressing this, but it’s spot on - the lawn maintenance working crews in question are all folks out trying to hustle and earn a living, these are not “outfits” with disposable income to invest in the electric future. Quite often the gear is bought/sold in pawn shops all over town, tools are probably the #1 item in any given pawn shop around here (followed by the usual jewelry, guns, etc disposable income items).

    Tangent: I lived in CA (SF) for ~18yrs and recognize a lot of the names of the cities and what they’re generally like. “Rich”, “white” (light-skinned any race/culture), “affluent” are the words that came to mind. I dare say that many of these enacted bans are based on “those brown folks making too much noise in my pretty neighborhood.” $0.02

    • adude007@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      These types of companies may not have tons of disposable income to invest in this but as they need new tools it will probably phase in.

      • Eyron@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        It probably depends on the batteries, battery market, and repair market. We don’t really expect batteries to last a decade. The repairability of these tools is a concern.

        Meanwhile, it’s pretty common to repair gas tools. Sometimes from multiple broken ones. Powering the gas tools is similarly simple. None of it requires a company to continue to develop their proprietary product to run.

        This is an industry and a market that has been around for decades. I suspect the limited part supply and limited repairability of the electric tools is going to limit their practical lifetime compared to the existing ones on the market.