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Above 1200 Sq/FT DFB's Garage

Wokspaces above 1200 squarefeet.
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
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Australia
Over the last few days, I've been attempting to revive a selection of towels that had become increasingly hydrophobic. I started by soaking overnight in hot water with Rags to Riches, then cycled through the washing machine with an extra rinse and spin, followed by drying on low heat. For now, I've done this to the following towels -

4x TRC Gauntlet 24x60 (Drying)
10x TRC Gauntlet 12x12 (Wheels)
4x Microfiber Madness Chipmunk Jr. 16x16 (Drying)
12x TRC Dry Me A River 16x4 (Glass)
2x TRC Dry Me A River 20x40 (Door Jambs)
9x TRC FTW 16x16 (Glass, Drying)

There is nothing worse than a hydrophobic towel, it just pushes liquid around and around, increasing the working time and contacting the paint more than you should need. In my case, there are two causes for this -

- Using SiO2 drying aids and glass cleaners
- A change in laundry detergent.

The obvious action here would be to stop using drying aids, at least ones with SiO2 or wax. However, the drying aid process is one of the tasks I truly enjoy, so I do my best to manage the situation.

In the past, I've noted that as long as you prevent the towels from drying out and get them into the wash ASAP, you'll reduce the likelihood of them become hydrophobic. And I still stand by that advice, leaving towels in an open pile for days or weeks is a one-way ticket to Hydrophobic City. But it's clear that the laundry detergent plays a role too. Moving onto a cheaper detergent didn't really save me any money. In the end, its actually been a waste of time and money.

Thankfully, it would appear I've managed to revive them. The drying towels are back to nearly new, easily soaking up water and spreading the drying aid. The glass towels are much better too, again absorbing moisture rather than moving it around.

So, I got lucky on this one. The retail cost of that collection of towels above comes in at about $715 AUD. Buying the cheaper detergent to save $50 risked a $700+ collection of towels.

I will also say this, sometimes the apparent "hype" is justified, as in Rags to Riches is THE BEST microfiber detergent on the market.
 
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moab11

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Nov 22, 2015
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Thunder Bay, Ontario
Thanks for the follow up on R2R, and glad to hear it worked to bring your towels back. I'll keep it stocked going forward as well.

Your post about Touch On is also timely, as I was going to ask what you would recommend for a wash and wax style product after using Touchless as a pre wash. It seems like Touch On can work as a wash, but maybe not recommended? Would there be another product that you would recommend?
 
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
Messages
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Location
Australia
Thanks for the follow up on R2R, and glad to hear it worked to bring your towels back. I'll keep it stocked going forward as well.

Your post about Touch On is also timely, as I was going to ask what you would recommend for a wash and wax style product after using Touchless as a pre wash. It seems like Touch On can work as a wash, but maybe not recommended? Would there be another product that you would recommend?

From what I've noticed, there are two types these soaps.

Type 1 - these back off the "protection" to be a better soap (cleaning, lubrication, suds). KCx CES, KCx Nano Magic, Ethos Ceramic Shampoo.

Type 2 - these go the other direction, upping the "protection" at the expense of being a soap. This includes Carpro HydrO2 Foam, Bilt Hamber Touch-On, Gyeon Bathe+.

So you need to decide what you want and need from the soap. The best balance I've found is KCx CES, but again you need to make sure you aren't trying to bite off more than it can chew. If you want something foaming, I also like Ethos Ceramic Shampoo, but the before and after isn't as pronounced.

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D.F.B

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Location
Australia
Walkies this afternoon in our favourite spot. With all the rain earlier in the week, the river has breached the banks and has begun flooding into the valleys. The walking track also doubles as a levy bank, with a separate path below that is now flooded out in spots. The bird life seems to be enjoying it though.

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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
Messages
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Australia
I don't know the exact moment, but since I was a kid, I've been obsessed with small engines. Lawn mowers, leaf blowers, grass trimmers, chainsaws — if it's got a small engine, I'm in. Pinpointing my Stihl obsession is easier: I used to watch in awe as our neighbour cut firewood with his Stihl chainsaw, and ever since, I wanted one of my own.

As fate would have it, I eventually inherited that chainsaw..............two weeks after I had bought my first "real" chainsaw.

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I started my own lawn mowing business at 15. My parents bought me a lawnmower and trimmer for consecutive birthdays. My dad bought me a leaf blower, which I worked off by mowing the lawns at his office — that leaf blower was my first Stihl product, and I still have it.

As the business grew, so did my collection of Stihl tools, out of necessity, but if I'm honest, buying tools was a dream come true. Apart from a couple of deviations, I've stayed a Stihl customer ever since: blowers, hedge trimmers, multi-tools, grass trimmers, shears, pole saws, and best of all, my own Stihl chainsaws — four of them, actually. Some don't even have a small engine, but I'm happy to compromise where it makes sense.

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In 2026, Stihl celebrates 100 years in business, and they've been running several promotions to mark it. The most visible is the Centennial Edition MS 500i chainsaw — a special edition with bespoke finishes, unique graphics and limited availability. To get one, you had to enter a ballot and be prepared to fork out $3,500 for a chainsaw you'd realistically never cut wood with (the fact it comes with a custom display stand says it all). I want one.

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Stihl also ran a promotion called Australia's Biggest STIHL Fan:

"We're looking for Australia's biggest STIHL fan on INSTAGRAM! Think you're STIHL's #1 supporter? Now's your chance to prove it. Share your STIHL story, your favourite tool, your tattoos, or show us your STIHL collection for a chance to be featured as part of our 100-year celebrations."

I'm decent at telling a story and run a reasonable Instagram account, so I threw my hat in the ring. First prize was the Centennial MS 500i, second was a bundle of AP pro-grade battery tools, third a selection of AK battery tools, and fourth an assortment of AS battery tools. The global prize was a trip to Germany (thanks, but no thanks).

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Knowing my level of Stihl obsession is modest compared to some, I entered the competition with zero expectations. I had actually forgotten about it. Then last Friday, I spotted on Instagram that I'd won 4th place! Not the Centennial chainsaw I had been hoping for, but I’m not complaining.

The fourth prize was called the Camping & Home Bundle, which included the BGA 30 Blower (kit), PS1 Power Bank, RCA 20 Pressure Washer (skin), KOA 20 inflator (kit), and SEA 20 vacuum (skin). All up, $1015 worth of tools.


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To quote a successful businessman – “support the businesses that helps support yours”. I buy tools out of both need and want. I buy Stihl because they make great products that have helped build my business and allowed me to make an income from it. Over the years, I would plug the brand on social media, recommend their products to others, gave them plenty of free advertising. I never asked nor expected anything out of that. So, as much as anything, I’m just happy to have caught Stihl’s attention.

Collection of the prize is being organized by my local Stihl dealer, which I have a great relationship with. I’ll be sure to do my usual thing with these new toys tools.
 
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D.F.B

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Australia
Congrats on the free new toys!
I must say I have no real need for an MS500i, but reading your posts makes it tough to hold off some days.

I'll need to drop a couple of trees in at some stage in the next year, working on something BIG, a lifelong goal. I can't wait to put that saw to good use, its such a hotrod!

 
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
Messages
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Location
Australia
Picked up a new garden client at the end of May. No mowing, just general gardening work. It's a large sweeping garden that backs onto bushland and the river, which I worry about come spring and summer as the snake population wakes up. There is also a large flowing creek bed and pond, of which the surrounding garden had been smothered in weeds and took two visits to get on top of. I also cut back three overgrown Yucca's.

This week, the client wanted a heavy reduction on an overgrown Oleander. Well-established, this specimen was at least 5-metres in height and had a lot of thick branches, some approaching 4- to 5-inches in diameter. Overall, I brought it back down to about 2-metres, the idea to stimulate fresh growth and have it flowering where the customer could see it.

I'm so glad I bought a pole saw last year, it makes jobs like this so much easier and safer (I hate ladders).

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Now that I've gotten on top of the big stuff, it should just be a matter of maintaining it. To give you an idea of how much work the garden has required, I've taken away 10 heavily stacked loads of green waste to the tip at $25 a pop.

Who needs a trailer........................

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moab11

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Nov 22, 2015
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582
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
Having a work truck like that would be so handy a lot of the time. Modern full size trucks are cumbersome for simple jobs like this and probably can't hold as much.
 
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
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Location
Australia
Having a work truck like that would be so handy a lot of the time. Modern full size trucks are cumbersome for simple jobs like this and probably can't hold as much.

The height and depth of a pickup tub makes them hard to work out of. They are also too small, so people end up towing a trailer to carry their tools. Just doesn't make logical sense to me. But then my povo base model Ranger doesn't have an ego inflator function, which matters to 95% of pickup buyers.
 

moab11

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Joined
Nov 22, 2015
Messages
582
Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario
I drive a full size truck (crew cab, 6.5ft bed. Wish I could get a half ton with an 8ft bed) because I needed a do everything vehicle and need the towing ability of a truck.
The 80% of the time I don't need it though, I wish I had a smaller vehicle. Something like your ranger would be great, but I don't think we could get them with trays before, and all the new midsize trucks are almost as big and just as expensive as full size trucks.
 
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
Messages
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Location
Australia
This is one of those things I didn't know how to search for because I didn't know its name. When I finally landed on it through a vague chain of Google searches, I discovered others didn't know the name either. The product in question is called a Bettix 'Bettamix' — a twin-chambered chemical bottle that makes dosing quick and accurate by eliminating the need for a measuring cup.

I've used these for years, mostly in horticulture, where they're common for dosing insecticides and herbicides. They're also handy for mixing 2-stroke oil — not having to carry a separate measuring container eliminates the mess (and the hassle of finding a way to clean it out) on the job.

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This style of bottle is sold under a variety of different brand names, along with a range of designs and capacities. I prefer this particular 1-litre version, mainly for the metric measurements — it makes mixing fuel to a 50:1 ratio easy, at 100ml to 5 litres of fuel. Surprisingly, it's Australian-made, too.

10 X 1L Plastic Twin Chamber Bottle & Tamper Evident Cap Chemical Bottle Food | eBay Australia

Over time, the squeeze and release of the bottle causes them to crack, so I buy these in bulk and replace them as needed for herbicide, mixing oil, and detailing supplies. I then buy the chemical itself in larger bulk quantities and refill the smaller 1-litre bottle as it's used.

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This may or may not be news to you, but if you've ever wondered, now you know what a Bettix Bottle is.
 
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D.F.B

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Aug 2, 2023
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Australia
Briggs & Stratton DOV / Vanguard

Back in the late 2000s, I was shopping for a new mower for my business. After a series of Victas and a dud Honda riddled with problems and far too heavy, I wanted to give Masport a try. I also decided to switch from aluminium to steel for the deck construction, primarily because stamped steel is lighter than cast aluminium.

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The models in question were the 600ST and 750ST from the silver Platinum series, pared-back mulch-and-catch units with a 19-inch cut and I/C engines. In the end, I went for the 750ST with the big-block 850. I was coming from an older 190cc Briggs Quantum XTS60 and an 187cc Honda GSV190, so I really didn’t want to go backwards on capacity. Sadly, that mower lasted less than 12 months — the supposed "heavy-duty steel chassis" ended up with flogged-out axle mountings, rendering it fit only for the scrap pile. The engine, on the other hand, got repurposed. I learnt a lesson with that mower: never buy a steel chassis for commercial use, and always get the biggest engine possible.

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Going back to that choice between the 600ST and 750ST, the main difference was the engine, both of which were brand designs. The first being the one I went with, the 190cc Briggs & Stratton 850-Series OHV I/C, which effectively replaced the Intek Edge. The second, which the salesman seemed very interested in, was the totally new and different 161cc Briggs & Stratton 750 DOV I/C. Being Industrial Commercial (I/C) engines, both had a cast iron bore for longevity. While I went for the bigger option, I was still curious about that new DOV engine. A few years later, I bought a Victa Mustang with the DOV engine.

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DOV stands for Direct Overhead Valve. This wasn't the usual pushrod OHV design, instead it used lever arms that were operated by a single lobe camshaft. Briggs made lofty claims of improved performance, increased efficiency, lower oil consumption, lower operating temperatures, 10% less vibration, and 60% less high frequency noise. Some came with a primer, while others had the ReadyStart automatic choke, the first Briggs to get that system. This engine was initially sold with a cast iron bore and marketed under the I/C banner, but an alloy bore and a smaller 140cc version came later, as well the InStart system.

A period brochure I collected at the time –

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On paper, this all-new engine sounded like a breakthrough for Briggs & Stratton. Keep in mind that their bread-and-butter lawn mower engines, the L-Head side valve, could trace their roots back to the 1960s. And yet...

I hated this engine. The smaller 161cc capacity just couldn't match the power and torque of the 190cc 850-Series. Power was around 5.0hp with 10.8 Nm of torque for the DOV, and 6.5hp and 11.5 Nm for the 850. In heavy cutting conditions, the DOV would bog down and run out of puff long before the 850. I also found as the engine laboured, it tended to make more noise, a clattery sound that didn't really live up to the claims of lower noise.

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The thing I never understood about the DOV was its role within the range. It lacked balls to be a commercial option, and the price premium it carried over other Briggs engines didn't really suit the cost-conscious domestic market. Then Briggs replaced the L-Head engines with their new small-block conventional OHV E-Series, which was a completely different design to the DOV and came in similar 140cc and 163cc sizes. So what purpose did the DOV serve? It was too expensive for the homeowner market, and too weak for commercial use.

Clearly Briggs struggled to find homes for the DOV, so in the mid 2010's they rebranded it as a Vanguard. While the regular DOV remained in production, the Vanguard DOV was based on the 161cc version with a cast iron bore and presumably intended as an alternative to the Honda GXV160. Compared to "real" Vanguard's, which were improvements over the regular Briggs (or totally different), the Vanguard DOV was exactly the same as the regular DOV, just with a different top cover and fan shroud, an all-black design, muffler cover and gold badging.

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In Victa's case, which were still owned by Briggs & Stratton at the time, they replaced or supplemented their commercial models with the Vanguard. That included the Commercial 19 and 21 models, the Mulchmaster, and MasterCut 600. Victa also designed a snorkel adaptor for the air filter cover, the only modern Briggs to get a snorkel. At one point, they sold it alongside the GXV160 and the last of the Powertorque engines.

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Can you spot the mistake with this image?

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And yet, despite the name change, the Vanguard suffered the same drawbacks as the regular DOV. Gutless, noisy and prone to valvetrain failures. I've never been a Honda diehard, but the similar capacity Honda GXV160 felt stronger and smoother..........if not quieter. Again, the DOV and Vanguard just didn't have the balls, no matter what market it was aimed at.

From what I can see, the DOV and Vanguard were discontinued late last year, early this year. Overall, the valvetrain looked innovative, but in reality, didn't really do anything over and above a traditional OHV setup. And it's silly product decisions like the DOV that most likely contributed to their bankruptcy a few years ago........spending money on stuff that didn't serve a defined purpose. And yet, look at Honda and they only make a handful of different engines, instead of countless different variations on a theme that aren't fully supported in the market.

If you’ve read this far, well done! If you’ve scrolled this far, well this is where the interesting part is, well interesting to me at least…………….

The following information is from an ex-Briggs & Stratton Australia employee who kindly took the time to answer a couple of questions regarding the DOV engine and Briggs manufacturing in recent years.

“The DOV was launched to dealers around 2010, believe it or not, they were/are made in China. The first of the small verticals to be made there. At the time everything from the 148 cc L heads up was made in the USA. Early examples even had Torch brand spark plugs. It was the first appearance of the Ready Start system and started easier than anything else B&S had at the time. The air filter housing and element were both huge improvements over the old Intek 55. The 850 series (made in USA) was released shortly after.”

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In regard to the Vanguard branding –

“We really wanted Vanguard on the 850 commercial engine but, of the two engines, it was only the I/C version of the DOV that met the very strict requirements to wear the Vanguard name. Other upgrades were made to the piston and rings from memory. Emissions killed the snorkel, and from memory EU V standards killed the I/C and Vanguard versions. Emissions also affects where the word ‘commercial’ can be used so the 850 commercial engine ended up as the 850 PXi series.”

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In regard to manufacturing locations –

“Pre-covid, the small vertical engines for Australia (excluding DOV) were all made in the USA, that includes all Classic, Sprint, Quattro, and Quantum L-head engines, as well as the new E, EX, and EXi 140cc, 150cc, 163cc OHV engines. Manufacturing began in China around 2020 and the local Victa business chose to continue sourcing from the USA at this stage as the price difference was negligible. However, supply chain challenges during covid (and chapter 11) blew out the lead times from US plants to over a year for some engine models and left Victa with the choice of Chinese built engines, or no engines. At that point, Victa started using Chinese built engines. That stabilised somewhat and as of the sale to Roy Gripske & Sons, it was a dual source model for vertical shaft engines under 190cc. Meaning on the day you might get a Chinese one or an American one.

Quality was, for all intents and purposes, identical. The 190-223cc 850 & 1000 series on commercial mowers and small ride-ons are all still made in the USA though. Incidentally, most of the ‘global’ parts they reference are less important ones like blower housings. Internals and castings were mostly US produced even if assembled in China.”


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In regard to OEM parts –

“Whenever people would try to save a couple of bucks on aftermarket parts I always went back to the time I had a customer DOV on a Masport that was dusted. Looking at the filter element, a small section of the paper hadn’t bonded with the foam gasket in production. It was a genuine filter so I approved a brand-new engine straight away, no further questions. Nobody’s perfect and the fact the filter was genuine meant the customer got a new engine. If an aftermarket filter had done the same thing they’d have been SOL.”

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So there you go, the failure that was the DOV and DOV Vanguard engines. A waste of resources that no doubt contributed to the chapter 11 bankruptcy in July 2020.
 
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