G'day Mystyler Yes, a brilliant little mower was the twin-rotor sunbeam. These first sunbeams sold well here!
The downside - with twin chutes - meant that the factory never offered a grass catcher.
This did not stop one inventive Australian from making a twin catcher system ...
I apologise, my History Record has not yet covered the second model - the twin-rotor single discharge port job. Here, Sunbeam did offer a factory catcher. [These are the rarer machines]
Thanks for the photos - I had wondered how you could fit a catcher, and you didn't, you fit two! That's a great bit of engineering. The factory catcher does look a bit sleeker, in a way...?
I don't have an electric mower in my collection. (Did I just say I have a collection?) I'll keep an eye on it. Looks very, very original.
I don't collect mowers. I just require Multiple Mowing Solutionsâ„¢.
The twin-chute Sunbeam was introduced when rotary catchers were not the accepted norm.
You have now come out of the closet and revealed yourself as a ... 'collector'! Like an AA meeting, or Covid-19, this is the first stage to a cure.
I will add this. For serious AUS collectors, the collection should include a Tecnico - our first AUS-made rotary mower.
I feel many collectors remain in denial - that an electric was our first rotary. They want it to be a Victa; in the same way they want a large polluting ute to represent masculinity.
It isn't ... Yes, an inconvenient truth ... Myth busted.
[Sorry for the rant, but I welcome Mystyler's view that a vintage electric lawnmower might form part of a collection. We need to save the early electric mowers!]
I don't have a collection. I have multiple options of solving the lawn trimming problem!
Thanks for the bit of history. I've done some more reading because of it. I have often wondered why the Victas were collected, but anything else of the same vintage seems to be passed over, including Rovers.
I don't collect mowers. I just require Multiple Mowing Solutionsâ„¢.
She's been saved to my favourite items on Gumtree, the sooner I finish my other projects, the sooner I may be able to fit in another. Being electric, there won't be too much to it I wouldn't have thought.
I passed up on an absolutely mint INGS Rota-Rola today. Looks like it was used a dozen times and then parked up for decades. Even had the metal catcher. Only asking $90. I just simply have no room, and this would have had to sit in the elements. With winter well and truly on the way, I just couldn't do it. I hope it went to a good home. I just love oddball machines.
Speaking of oddballs, I agree. It's the weird machines that I would have thought that collectors (uh, those with highly specialised and varied lawn mowing requirements) would be going for. Victa's reputation is well deserved, but the 18 was a mass produced machine. Kinda like SB45s. Both go for huge prices. Maybe it's simply parts availability or easy recognition of the model that has helped in this regard, but I don't really get it. Hey, I'd have a Rotomo in my...fleet...but to pay a couple of grand for one? Holy moly.
Mind, people may think I'm nuts trying to get a modified, ex-commercial use Pope 320 back into service, so I guess it's a case of each to their own.
I don't collect mowers. I just require Multiple Mowing Solutionsâ„¢.